With citizenship-by-investment demand reshaping neighbourhoods from Besiktas to Kadikoy, newcomers need a strategic roadmap to navigate property yields and maximise returns.
Major residential projects along Cumhuriyet Caddesi and near Osmanbey station promise to ease tenant competition, but early movers must navigate a shifting market.
New approvals across Sisli and Kadikoy are reshaping the market, but rising construction costs and citizenship demand are reshaping buyer strategy for 2026.
As ultra-premium residential towers rise across Besiktaş and the Bosphorus waterfront, the face of Istanbul's elite property market is being fundamentally redrawn—with profound implications for neighbourhood character, pricing, and investor appetite.
As landlords tighten terms and tenants struggle with rising costs, new buyer incentives reveal the real cost of delaying homeownership in Turkey's competitive property market.
As foreign capital floods the market, actual rental income is painting a starkly different picture from headline prices across the city's most coveted neighbourhoods.
As property prices climb past $2,500 per square metre across the city, rental markets in premium neighbourhoods face a reckoning between investor expectations and tenant affordability.
With average prices hovering around $2,500 per square metre, newcomers to Istanbul's property market need strategy—here's what you need to know about social housing programmes, emerging neighbourhoods, and breaking into ownership.
As foreign investors and Istanbul's elite seek alternatives to saturated Besiktaş and Beyoğlu, a quiet Bosphorus village is transforming into a prestige address—with prices climbing 40% in two years.
As clearance rates shift and entry-level neighbourhoods show unexpected strength, the signals for buyers chasing government support have never been clearer.