
Affordability Realities: County-Wide Median House Price in Louth Slips Slightly to €370,000 as Buyers Turn Cautious Amid Economic Uncertainty
House hunters and estate trackers across Louth are analyzing a minor cooling trend in the local market, after the latest state registry files showed property valuations softening slightly by €5,000.
A slight breath taken in a hot property market. The overall baseline index across the county lines remains tightly balanced against a massive lack of supply.
Fresh official figures released by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) in their latest Residential Property Price Index report show that the county-wide median house price for **Louth** now stands at €370,000. This marks a minor decline of €5,000 compared to the metrics logged back in March, highlighting that working-class buyers are keeping a sharper eye on their budgets as interest rates and living costs challenge the market.
Steady Tracking Across the Primary Dundalk A91 Sectors in Louth
The urban center holds firm while existing housing stock sees a minor drop.
Despite the slight slide in the overarching county-wide index, residential values in the Dundalk Eircode (A91) zone remained completely static through April 2026. The median price for properties changing hands in the area stood firm at €340,000, mirroring the exact baseline tracked in March. Out of 63 houses successfully traded in Dundalk over the month, 26 were picked up by first-time buyers, 30 went to former owner-occupiers, and seven were acquired by non-occupier entities.
The internal balance between new estates and second-hand properties remains notable:
- 🏗️ New Builds: 28 new-build properties were completed and sold in Dundalk during the tracking window. The median price for these modern structures edged up by €2,500 to hit **€397,500**.
- 🏡 Existing Stock: Second-hand and established homes made up 35 of the sales. Their median value dipped by €1,500 from the previous month, settling at **€303,500**.
Drogheda A92 Metrics Witness a Minor Price Push in Louth
A heavy surge in new-build valuations contrasts with a sharp softening in older estates.
Further south along the coastal lines of **Louth**, the Drogheda (A92) residential framework showed slightly different dynamics. The overall median price of residential properties changing hands in April 2026 crawled up to €385,000, marking a slight increase of €2,500 on the previous month’s registers. A busy trading month saw 81 properties sold, with first-time buyers dominating the gate at 41 purchases, while 38 went to previous owners and two were logged to non-occupiers.
| Louth Market Zone (April 2026) | Overall Median Price | New-Build Median Price | Existing Home Median Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dundalk (A91 Sector) | €340,000 (Unchanged) | €397,500 (Up €2,500) | €303,500 (Down €1,500) |
| Drogheda (A92 Sector) | €385,000 (Up €2,500) | €417,000 (Up €11,000) | €306,000 (Down €25,000) |
The gap between old and new properties widened extensively in Drogheda. While 28 newly constructed units commanded a premium median price of €417,000 (jumping nearly €11,000 from March), the 53 existing homes sold saw their median drop significantly by €25,000 to sit at €306,000.
National Comparison Logs and Affordability Concerns in Louth
Auctioneers pinpoint smaller family sizes and transit routes as vital buying factors.
On the grand national stage, the annual inflation rate for residential properties tapered down to 6.2% in the 12 months to April, slowing down from the 6.7% recorded in March. The median price of a dwelling purchased across the entire state over the past year stood at €394,980—with Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown tracking at the absolute highest apex of €685,750, while Longford maintained the lowest entry line at €197,000. Nationwide, household buyers filed 3,741 purchase agreements with the Revenue Commissioners in April alone, totaling a massive €1.63 billion in financial transactions.
Commenting on the numbers, the Institute of Professional Auctioneers & Valuers (IPAV) stated that the cooling expansion rate is entirely unsurprising given widespread economic uncertainty. Genevieve McGuirk, IPAV’s Chief Executive, indicated that field agents are noticing a general softening in prices that is far more visible in rural townlands rather than compact urban areas, with buyers exercising deep caution before signing contracts.
McGuirk added that exceptional transport links are dictating where working-class buyers invest their money, as local people strive to keep commute times to their workplaces as brief as possible. The baseline demographic consists heavily of buyers in their late 30s with smaller families, alongside an active presence from international buyers. While one-off builds face major construction roadblocks due to soaring material costs, IPAV expects structural demand to keep property markets robust across **Louth**, with all eyes on whether government planning overhauls can successfully accelerate supply.
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