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China home prices likely to fall at slower pace this year; seen rising in 2027

By Thomson Reuters May 28, 2026 | 11:43 PM

By Liangping Gao and Ryan Woo

BEIJING, May 29 (Reuters) – China’s home prices are expected to fall at a slower pace than forecast in a March survey and edge up in 2027, suggesting ​the sector remains under pressure but might be moving toward a ‌slower adjustment phase.

Home prices are likely to fall 3.5% this year, slower than the 4.0% decline forecast in March, and rise 0.3% in 2027, versus the previous forecast of no change, according to a Reuters housing market poll conducted May 18-28.

Prices are expected ‌to ​rise 1.8% in 2028, up from a 0.5% ⁠gain forecast in the March ⁠survey.

China’s home building industry is likely to remain in contraction in 2026, but the pace of decline should gradually slow as policy support continues, default-contagion risks ease, and new-home sales volumes approach long-term sustainable levels, said ​Lulu Shi, director of Asia-Pacific corporate ratings at Fitch Ratings.

Following the central government’s renewed push to limit new projects and reduce housing inventory at ⁠the annual parliamentary meeting in early March, ⁠several Chinese cities have rolled out incentives, including subsidies, for ​homebuyers.

In late April, Shenzhen eased home-purchase restrictions in its core districts, while Guangzhou ​introduced home-buying subsidies.

Recent policy moves could accelerate stabilisation in core ‌areas of higher-tier cities, while “suburban districts and lower-tier cities facing population outflows and industrial decline may remain under greater pressure,” Shi said.

Property investment is expected to fall 12.0% this year, compared with a 10.3% decline forecast in March, ⁠while sales are expected to slump 8.3%, deeper than the 6.5% decline predicted previously.

Weak household confidence in jobs, incomes, and home-price expectations would continue to weigh ⁠on demand, said Huang ‌Yu, executive vice president of the China Index Academy.

The ⁠policy priority is to stabilise the property market and ​avoid a ‌disorderly slowdown, rather than revive the sector through forceful ​stimulus, analysts ⁠said.

The key policy objective is to “prevent the risk of a sharp loss of momentum,” said Yingxue Ren, associate director of corporate ratings at S&P Global (China) Ratings, adding that authorities still have room to increase support if needed.

(Other stories from the Q2 Reuters housing market polls)

(Reporting by Liangping Gao and Ryan Woo; Editing ​by Rashmi Aich)