House Prices/GDP per Capita in Slovak Republic compared to Europe
Footnote |
Export
Sort:
Alphabetically |
Ascending Rank |
Descending Rank
Ukraine |
![]() |
Russia |
![]() |
UK |
![]() |
Moldova |
![]() |
Turkey |
![]() |
Serbia |
![]() |
Czech Rep. |
![]() |
France |
![]() |
Poland |
![]() |
Bulgaria |
![]() |
Austria |
![]() |
Italy |
![]() |
Macedonia |
![]() |
Montenegro |
![]() |
Greece |
![]() |
Hungary |
![]() |
Latvia |
![]() |
Portugal |
![]() |
Finland |
![]() |
Spain |
![]() |
Malta |
![]() |
Estonia |
![]() |
Romania |
![]() |
Slovak Rep. |
![]() |
Slovenia |
![]() |
Switzerland |
![]() |
Croatia |
![]() |
Netherlands |
![]() |
Lithuania |
![]() |
Germany |
![]() |
Sweden |
![]() |
Norway |
![]() |
Denmark |
![]() |
Belgium |
![]() |
Cyprus |
![]() |
Luxembourg |
![]() |
Slovak Republic: House price to income ratio
The house price to income ratio is the ratio of the cost of a typical upscale housing unit of 100 square metres, compared to the countrys GDP per capita. Normally this ratio will be much higher in low income countries than in high income countries.
The formula is: (Price per square metre / GDP per capita)*100. The house price to income ratios published by the Global Property Guide are based on the Global Property Guides own proprietary in-house research, but we use the IMFs GDP per capita figures.
Slovakia has quarterly residential property prices. published by the National Bank of Slovakia. General economics statistics for Slovakia are published by the Statistical Office and National Bank of Slovakia, which also keeps mortgage loan figures.