
Jamaica’s housing market continues to send mixed signals to the public.
On one side, affordability pressures remain intense. Construction costs are still elevated. Insurance concerns have become more serious. Borrowing remains expensive compared to the ultra-low-rate years many buyers became accustomed to internationally. Infrastructure challenges persist in several parishes. At the same time, many Jamaicans are still recovering financially from wider economic strain, rising living costs, and the lingering effects of recent disruptions across the island.
Yet despite all of that, the market itself continues moving at a surprisingly strong pace.
Across Jamaica, there are currently somewhere in the region of 1,900 to 2,000 residential properties sitting under offer, alongside another estimated 2,300 to 2,400 properties under contract. Those figures span apartments, houses, townhouses, residential lots, development lands, and resort-related properties islandwide.
And importantly, those numbers only represent part of the market.
Jamaica effectively operates with two real estate economies simultaneously. There is the visible, formal market represented through agencies, developers, banks, valuators, attorneys, and listing systems. Then there is the quieter market operating through private negotiations, family transfers, diaspora-funded construction, informal sales, inheritance arrangements, unadvertised developments, and properties that never fully enter formal listing channels at all.
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