The price per square meter in elite apartments in Moscow reached 4.8 million rubles
The cost per 1 sq. m. in elite apartments in Moscow at the end of December 2024 amounted to 4.8 million rubles. In the range of apartment sizes used to calculate the index, there is considerable diversity - from 80 to 1000 square meters. m. This was told to "Izvestia" by analysts of "Intermark Urban Real Estate", who prepared a study of the cost of the most expensive capital apartments PCM TOP-100 (Prime Central Moscow TOP-100 Index).
"The average offer budget of an apartment included in the PCM TOP-100 amounted to 1.6 billion rubles. The total aggregate value of the first hundred of the capital's elite apartments is about 160 billion rubles", - noted the experts.
According to the study of analysts, by the end of 2024, the total cost of premium apartments increased by 2.7 times compared to December 2019.
The cost of the most expensive offer in the Moscow market of elite housing (excluding mansions) is about 8.3 billion rubles. The lower boundary of the PCM TOP-100 rating according to the results of the IV quarter of 2024 is an apartment worth 288 million rubles.
The range of apartment areas selected for calculation of the index is quite wide - from 80 to 1000 square meters, with the largest share of lots over 300 square meters (46% of the total supply). The average area of a lot in the rating is 333 sq. m. (8% more than last year). At the same time, 25% of lots in the rating are penthouses.
The main part of apartments in the rating are variants with the area of more than 300 sq. m. (46% of the total volume). The average size of the apartment in this list is 333 sq. m, which is 8% more than in 2023. In addition, it should be noted that 25% of the proposals in the rating are penthouses.
Earlier, on January 9, "Izvestia" got acquainted with the study of the development company COLDY, which reported on the current trends in the elite real estate market in Moscow. According to experts, the number of new high-budget projects is increasing, prices have risen following the active demand, while buyers' preferences for internal infrastructure have shifted towards options for family recreation and education.