
The Caracas Suburbs Where First Home Buyers Are Actually Winning at Auction
New grant programs and shifting inventory are giving first-time buyers a rare edge in pockets of the capital where seasoned investors once ruled.
All property coverage from Caracas.

New grant programs and shifting inventory are giving first-time buyers a rare edge in pockets of the capital where seasoned investors once ruled.

A new affordability gap between the capital and Venezuela's secondary cities is forcing renters and would-be buyers to rethink where — and whether — to plant roots.

Less than 2 percent of apartments in key zones are available, leading to bidding wars and lease offers being snapped up within hours.

Municipal council considers upzoning plan to add housing and retail along La Boyera Avenue, sparking debate over Caracas’ urban future.

As new towers rise in Chacao and more permits clear in El Hatillo, local groups and developers lock horns over the city’s changing face.

A new wave of grant programs and softer competition in outer municipalities is giving first-time buyers a foothold in the capital's property market.

With a mere 2.5% of rental properties available, tenants are facing an uphill battle to secure a home in the city's most desirable neighborhoods

A proposed high-rise project in the Sabana Grande neighbourhood has sparked heated debate among residents and developers, highlighting the complexities of urban growth in Caracas.

A 35-story apartment tower is set to change the Caracas skyline, but what does it mean for buyers and renters in the city?

First-time homebuyers in Caracas can benefit from understanding the pros and cons of lenders mortgage insurance, a crucial aspect of the city's dynamic real estate market.

With mortgage rates punishing and dollar-denominated asking prices climbing in Chacao and El Hatillo, first-time buyers are discovering that a lease may be the smarter short-term bet.

A draft municipal proposal to reclassify residential land in Altamira for mixed-use development has set off alarm bells among homeowners and fresh excitement among investors.

A new affordability gap has flipped the calculus for families in at least four outer districts, where monthly mortgage payments are undercutting rental asking prices by as much as 30 percent.

A 35-story apartment tower is set to rise in the heart of Caracas, bringing 200 new units to the city's dynamic real estate market.

Caracas renters face bidding wars and soaring prices as available apartments disappear from the market at a record pace.
With available apartments across Chacao and El Rosal disappearing within days of listing, the calculus of renting versus buying has never been more complicated for ordinary caraqueños.
A new affordability gap is opening between Venezuela's capital and its regional cities, and it is reshaping where ordinary families choose to live.
With purchase prices in Altamira climbing faster than salaries, a growing number of caraqueños are choosing to rent where they live and buy where the numbers make sense.
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