“Increased demand led to a decrease in housing affordability in recent years” – Central Bank
In 2023, the growth gap between income and property prices quadrupled.

Photo: Kun.uz
At the end of 2023, the gap in the growth rate of nominal income and prices for residential real estate widened to 20%, the Central Bank reported.
Last year, the number of real estate purchase and sale transactions increased by 4.4% – to 335 thousand units. In October-December, activity in the housing market slowed by 10% compared to the third quarter – to 83.2 thousand transactions.
“Activity in 2023 was mainly supported by high demand in conditions of the attractiveness of the real estate market in comparison with other investment and savings instruments. High demand is also facilitated by the demand for mortgage lending among the population, which accelerated noticeably in October-November,” the published document reads.
In the primary real estate market, prices over the year increased by 39.6% (in dollar terms – by 26.9%), in the secondary market – by 35.1% (in dollar terms – by 23%). In Tashkent, Tashkent, Andijan, Bukhara and Khorezm regions, real estate prices increased by 40%, which was facilitated by “accelerating infrastructural development”.
In 2023, rental prices in national currency increased by 8.8%, and in dollar terms decreased by 1%. Rental housing values stabilized in the fourth quarter thanks to strong supply and slowing demand.
Rent prices increased the most in Fergana (21.1%), Bukhara (16.5%) and Tashkent (17.6%) regions. In other regions of the republic, prices increased by an average of 5-7%, while in Tashkent they decreased by more than 9%.
“In 2023, the growth gap between nominal incomes and house prices widened to 20%, up from 4.4% in 2022. On the contrary, due to the stabilization of rental prices, the difference between the growth of income and rent became negative (-5.2%),” the Central Bank noted.
In the report, the regulator emphasizes that the cyclically interrelated increased demand against the background of attractive profitability and rising prices lead to a certain decrease in housing affordability in recent years.
At the beginning of January, the Central Bank took the initiative to tighten the requirements for issuing mortgage and car loans to the population. The regulator also proposes to introduce new indicators for assessing the credit risk of borrowers.
Recommended
List of streets and intersections being repaired in Tashkent published
SOCIETY | 19:12 / 16.05.2024
Uzbekistan's flag flies high on Oceania's tallest volcano
SOCIETY | 17:54 / 15.05.2024
New tariffs to be introduced in Tashkent public transport
SOCIETY | 14:55 / 05.05.2023
Onix and Tracker cars withdrawn from sale
BUSINESS | 10:20 / 05.05.2023
Latest news
-
Centrum Air flight to Tashkent returns to Tbilisi after technical issue
SOCIETY | 15:43
-
Education for all: Saida Mirziyoyeva presents 17 new buses to remote schools in Samarkand on behalf of the President
SOCIETY | 15:16
-
Power outage in Kazakhstan affects Uzbekistan
SOCIETY | 14:18
-
Uzbekistan sees surge in foreign business presence, led by China
SOCIETY | 14:13
Related News

15:55 / 19.06.2025
All charter flights from and to Tashkent will move to ‘Tashkent-East’ airport

13:42 / 16.06.2025
Buy now, pay more: Hidden costs of installment plans raise concerns in Uzbekistan

14:54 / 13.06.2025
Energy costs, utility tariffs continue to shape inflation expectations in Uzbekistan

19:30 / 12.06.2025