
El Hatillo Emerges as Caracas’ Growth Corridor amid Infrastructure Blitz
Long a leafy retreat, El Hatillo is now the city’s hottest property market thanks to transit upgrades and new commercial projects.
All property coverage from Caracas.

Long a leafy retreat, El Hatillo is now the city’s hottest property market thanks to transit upgrades and new commercial projects.

With vacancy rates at historic lows and prices rising, tenants nearing lease end must navigate a squeezed market—and search for new options before contracts lapse.

Caracas investors eye El Paraíso as rental returns outpace rivals—analysts cite strong demand and rising yields.

A growing number of Caracas residents are renting in the city while buying investment properties in more affordable areas—here’s how the rent-vesting strategy stacks up against traditional ownership.

The west-side suburb now offers the city's highest returns for property investors, outpacing more traditional hotspots like Altamira and Las Mercedes.

Retirees and empty-nesters are flocking to compact, walkable neighbourhoods in search of safety and convenience. Property prices and local amenities reveal where the trend is strongest.

Older homeowners are cashing in on family homes and choosing compact comfort in two fast-changing districts. Here’s what’s drawing them to Los Palos Grandes and El Hatillo.

With rising demand and stagnant supply squeezing tenants, here's how renters can navigate expiring leases in Venezuela’s capital.

With rents rising in El Rosal and beyond, The Daily Caracas breaks down what the 30% affordability rule really means for local residents.

Surging home prices and volatile interest rates have pushed more residents to reconsider whether to rent or buy in the capital.

Investors are turning their attention to El Paraíso, where rental returns surpass all other Caracas suburbs, driven by seismic market shifts and changing renter demand.

A new 40-story tower is set to transform the Caracas skyline with 250 luxury apartments and commercial space.

A growing number of Caracas suburbs are seeing a shift in the affordability landscape, with buying becoming a more economical option than renting for many residents.

Rising rents in Caracas test the time-honored guideline that tenants should spend no more than 30% of income on housing.

Developers and investors are zeroing in on La Urbina, where the eastward Metro Line 5 extension and a major logistics park are reshaping the suburb’s future.

Rising mortgage rates, currency turbulence, and tightening inventories are remaking the capital’s housing landscape compared to the pandemic-era frenzy.

Caracas officials weigh new zoning rules that would allow high-rise towers and retail along Avenida Páez.

First-time buyers in Caracas weigh the pros and cons of new developments versus existing homes in the city's dynamic real estate market
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