• Real Estate Investment
  • 26 de May de 2026

How much does it cost to build a house in 2026? Values per m² and factors

Moradia portuguesa em fase de estrutura ao fim da tarde — quanto custa construir uma casa em 2026
Costs4 min readUpdated June 2026

In 2026, building a house in Portugal costs, as a rule, between €1,100 and €2,500 per square metre of construction — the range is wide because the price is a consequence of choices: finish level, design complexity, location and market timing. This guide gives you the reference figures, the factors that make them vary and a complete example for a 200 m² house.

Executive summary

  • 2026 references — standard construction from ~€1,100/m²; mid-range €1,400–1,800/m²; premium above €1,800/m².
  • Costs keep rising — +5.8% year-on-year in March 2026, with labour up 8.2% (INE).
  • The price is decided at design stage — programme, construction system and execution detail weigh more than any negotiation on site.
  • Complete budget — beyond the contract: fees, engineering disciplines, municipal charges, utility connections and contingencies.

1. How much per square metre in 2026

RangeConstruction costWhat it describes
Standard€1,100 – 1,400/m²Standard solutions, economical finishes, simple geometry
Mid-range€1,400 – 1,800/m²Good finishes, efficient window frames, integrated climate control
Premium€1,800 – 2,500+/m²Noble materials, large openings, home automation, landscaping

Indicative market values for houses, based on the studio’s design experience; they vary by region and market conditions.

In March 2026, new housing construction costs rose 5.8% year-on-year — with materials up 3.7% and labour up 8.2%.

Source: INE — New Housing Construction Cost Index, March 2026

2. The six factors that make the price vary

Location and access — labour, material transport and site logistics vary significantly between regions and within the same region. Area and programme — kitchens and bathrooms cost several times more per m² than bedrooms; pools, basements and retaining walls change the equation. Materials and finishes — the same house can vary 40% on the choices of claddings, window frames and equipment alone.

Design complexity — large openings, cantilevers and singular geometries demand more expensive structure and execution. Engineering and performance — the thermal and acoustic requirements of 2026 are paid for at design stage and saved on the energy bill. Market timing — with labour rising around 8% a year, the construction schedule has a measurable effect on the final cost.

Where the budget goes — typical distribution
STRUCTURE AND SHELL~35%
FINISHES~30%
SERVICES~20%
CHARGES~5%
CONTINGENCY~10%
Indicative distribution of the total cost of a standard house; the contingency reserve protects the budget from surprises on site.
Portuguese house at structural stage in the late afternoon

The structure is ~35% of the cost — and the phase in which design decisions no longer change cheaply.

3. Complete example: a 200 m² house

For a mid-range house (€1,600/m²), the realistic budget is not just the building contract:

ItemIndicative value
Construction contract (200 m² × €1,600)€320,000
Architecture and engineering design (~6–8%)€19,000 – 26,000
Municipal charges, including the urbanisation charge (varies by municipality)€3,000 – 12,000
Utility connections, meters and external works€8,000 – 20,000
Contingency reserve (8–10%)€26,000 – 32,000
Total order of magnitude≈ €376,000 – 410,000 + VAT

Illustrative example; each item depends on the plot, the municipality and the design options. On VAT, see the 6% regime.

4. The costs nobody puts in the budget

Overruns rarely come from the building contract — they come from what was left out: network connections (water, drainage, electricity), walls and retaining structures the plot demands, external works design, and VAT treated as a detail. Since July 2026, building one’s own home within the legal limits benefits from 6% VAT — a reduction with significant weight in the total budget.

“A construction budget does not fail on the price per m² — it fails on what was left unbudgeted. The complete design is the only estimate worth trusting.”

Tiago R. Correia

Architect

Before the budget comes the plot: confirm what to check before buying and how permitting works in 2026.

Frequently asked questions

Can I build at €1,500/m²?

Yes — it is the heart of the mid-range. What you cannot do is pair that value with a premium programme: coherence between ambition and budget is set at design stage, not on site.

Turnkey or direct management?

A turnkey contract gives price and schedule predictability; direct management can save money, but demands time, experience and risk tolerance. For most families, predictability is worth the premium.

How long does it take to build a house?

Between design, permitting and construction, plan for 24 to 36 months in total — construction itself runs 12 to 18 months, depending on complexity.

Does the architectural design add cost or save it?

A good design costs a fraction of what it prevents: execution errors, overruns, expensive solutions improvised on site. See how much fees cost — and what they include.

Would you like a grounded estimate for your house?

Tell us the plot and the programme — we return an estimate of construction costs, fees and timelines, before any commitment.

Request an estimate

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© Tiago R. Correia Arquitectos. 2026

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Rua Lagares d'El Rey 19-A, Lisbon