Over the past two decades, the average offer price per square meter of housing in Kraków has risen from PLN 6,021 to PLN 16,859.05 on the primary market — nearly a threefold increase. The path to today’s level was far from a straight line: it included a pre-crisis boom, a six-year correction, a long period of stagnation, and a sharp price surge after 2023 tied to a government mortgage subsidy program.
Two decades of Kraków’s housing market
NBP’s BaRN data makes it possible to track housing price changes in Kraków from Q3 2006 through Q1 2026 — a span of almost 20 years covering several distinct phases of the market cycle. Over that period, the average offer price per square meter on the primary market rose from PLN 6,021 to PLN 16,859.05, an increase of 180%. On the secondary market, the rise was somewhat smaller: from PLN 7,114 to PLN 16,566.48, up 133%. That works out to an average annual growth rate of roughly 5.4% on the primary market and 4.4% on the secondary market.
Boom, correction, stagnation, boom — four phases of the market
The first phase, spanning 2006–2007, was a pre-crisis credit boom: primary-market prices climbed from PLN 6,021 in Q3 2006 to a peak of PLN 8,420 in Q3 2007, while secondary-market prices rose from PLN 7,114 to PLN 8,369 as early as Q1 2007.
The second phase was a multi-year correction following the 2008 financial crisis. Primary-market prices declined almost continuously through Q3 2013, hitting a trough of PLN 6,071.46 — 27.9% below the 2007 peak. The secondary market bottomed out somewhat earlier, in Q2 2013, at PLN 6,488.58, a decline of 22.5% from its peak.
The third phase, running from 2013 to roughly 2019, was a period of slow and uneven recovery, during which the primary market spent several years trading in a narrow band of PLN 6,300–7,000 per square meter. The pace only picked up toward the end of the decade, as interest rates fell and investment demand grew.
The fourth phase covers the pandemic and post-pandemic period — prices rose steadily from 2020 onward, but the sharpest jump came after the mid-2023 launch of the government’s “Bezpieczny Kredyt 2%” mortgage subsidy program. The average primary-market offer price rose from PLN 12,145.58 in Q1 2023 to PLN 15,584.63 a year later — up 28.3% in four quarters. On the secondary market, the increase over the same period was 29.8%. Since early 2024, prices in Kraków have stabilized in a range of PLN 16,400–16,900 per square meter.
BaRN data covers offer and transaction prices for multi-family housing units sold, and includes VAT. The survey runs on a quarterly cycle: Q1 covers December–February, Q2 covers March–May, Q3 covers June–August, and Q4 covers September–November. The database has been maintained by the National Bank of Poland since Q3 2006.
Key moments by the numbers
| Period | Primary market, offer (PLN/m²) | Secondary market, offer (PLN/m²) | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q3 2006 | 6,021.00 | 7,114.00 | Start of the BaRN database |
| 2007 (peak) | 8,420.00 | 8,369.00 | Peak of the pre-crisis boom |
| 2013 (trough) | 6,071.46 | 6,488.58 | Bottom of the post-crisis correction |
| Q1 2019 | 7,622.58 | 8,697.03 | Pre-pandemic price level |
| Q1 2023 | 12,145.58 | 12,648.92 | Before the “Bezpieczny Kredyt 2%” program |
| Q1 2026 | 16,859.05 | 16,566.48 | Current level |
Data source: National Bank of Poland (NBP), BaRN residential property price database, Q3 2006 – Q1 2026. Own compilation based on NBP data.





