Amsterdam
Netherlands
Selling price (broker data). By far the most expensive Dutch city.
Selling price per sqm
EUR8,439 /sqm
up 1.0% over 12 months
Stable See homes in Amsterdam See the price dataAs of Q3 2025
Netherlands property prices
Short answer. In late 2025, the highest selling prices were in Amsterdam (about 8,439 EUR per square meter) and the lowest in Groningen (about 3,867 EUR per square meter), a gap of about 118%. These are selling (transaction) prices per square meter, shown next to the official trend. Source: NVM, MVA and CBS broker and registry data (selling prices per square meter).
Netherlands
Selling price (broker data). By far the most expensive Dutch city.
Selling price per sqm
EUR8,439 /sqm
up 1.0% over 12 months
Stable See homes in Amsterdam See the price dataAs of Q3 2025
Netherlands
Selling price (median). A fast rising central city.
Selling price per sqm
EUR5,400 /sqm
up 7% over 12 months
Rising See homes in Utrecht See the price dataAs of 2025
Netherlands
Selling price (median, NVM data). The seat of the Dutch government.
Selling price per sqm
EUR4,946 /sqm
up 8.9% over 12 months
Rising See homes in The Hague See the price dataAs of Q2 2025
Netherlands
Selling price (NVM data). The tech and design hub of the south.
Selling price per sqm
EUR4,858 /sqm
up 3.7% over 12 months
Stable See homes in Eindhoven See the price dataAs of Q4 2025
Netherlands
Selling price (CBS and Kadaster). Europe's biggest port city, with a modern skyline.
Selling price per sqm
EUR4,482 /sqm
up 5.3% over 12 months
Rising See homes in Rotterdam See the price dataAs of Q1 2025
Northern Netherlands
Selling price. Groningen province had the fastest growth in the country over the year.
Selling price per sqm
EUR3,867 /sqm
up 10.9% over 12 months
Rising See homes in Groningen See the price dataAs of 2025
See the homes that fit you through a vetted local agent. Free, and no spam.
| City | Selling (EUR/sqm) | Sold (EUR/sqm) | Change, 12 months | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amsterdam | 8,439 | n/a | +1.0% | Stable |
| Utrecht | 5,400 | n/a | +7% | Rising |
| The Hague | 4,946 | n/a | +8.9% | Rising |
| Eindhoven | 4,858 | n/a | +3.7% | Stable |
| Rotterdam | 4,482 | n/a | +5.3% | Rising |
| Groningen | 3,867 | n/a | +10.9% | Rising |
Source: NVM, MVA and CBS broker and registry data (selling prices per square meter). https://www.cbs.nl/en-gb/figures/detail/83906ENG
Netherlands's official transaction based House Price Index rose about 6.2% over the year to 2025-Q4, with the index at 219.01 (2015 = 100). This is the official trend behind the asking prices above. Source: Eurostat, House Price Index (prc_hpi_q), fetched 2026-06-08. https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/prc_hpi_q/default/table?lang=en
The Dutch figures here are selling (transaction) prices per square meter, which is what the brokers and CBS publish at city level, not asking prices. Asking prices typically run a little higher. The official national trend comes from CBS (Statistics Netherlands) and is also in Eurostat.
Amsterdam by far, at about 8,439 EUR per square meter, well ahead of Utrecht and The Hague. Groningen is the most affordable of these cities.
These are selling (transaction) prices, which is what Dutch brokers and CBS report by city. Asking prices typically run a little higher.
The city figures are from brokers and the land registry. The official national, transaction-based trend comes from CBS and Eurostat.