– An increase of 2.9 percent is a strong development in the aftermath of November and December that evolved stronger than normal, says CEO Christian Vammervold Dreyer in Property Norway.
– But we started the year with a low supply side of homes for sale, and we are therefore not surprised inflation, he adds.
Record sales
It was sold 6425 homes in January, which is 5.4 percent more than in January 2014.
– It has never been sold so many homes in a January that year. By the end of January there is a low number of homes for sale, particularly in Oslo and Bergen.
There are large regional differences in how long it takes to sell a home. Turnover rates vary from 19 days at the fastest to 129 days as the slowest, according Dreyer.
It took on average 46 days to sell a home in Norway in January. Last year the figure was 49 days.
Growth in all regions
All regions have experienced solid growth in house prices so far this year. By towns have Oslo and Tromsø had the strongest development, with prices for 3.3 percent.
The weakest development had Haugesund and Skien in January, respectively 1.8 and 2.3 percent growth.
All region of thousands have also had a positive 12-month growth. Strongest development Tromso with a weight of 16.9 percent and Oslo and Bergen with a growth of 10.3 percent.
The weakest growth in the last 12 months took place in Stavanger and Sandnes respectively 3.1 and 1.6 percent, according to Property Norway. (© NTB)
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