Grand Paris 2025: A “New Normal” That Favors Buyers Who Act Now
Volume XXIII, Issue 48
By Jay Corless, edited by Adrian Leeds
If you’ve been sitting on the sidelines wondering “Is now really the time?” the latest Notaires du Grand Paris report for the 3rd quarter of 2025 gives us a pretty clear answer: the market is waking up, prices are stabilizing, and serious buyers finally have room to breathe and negotiate again.

After two very turbulent years, we’re not going back to the frenzy of 2021, and that’s actually good news if you’re looking to buy a home in Paris or the surrounding region. What we’re seeing instead is a calmer, more balanced “new normal” in which volumes are up, prices are mostly flat, and motivated sellers are listening.
A MARKET THAT’S FINALLY MOVING AGAIN
Across Île-de-France, sales of existing homes (apartments + houses) jumped 13% in the 3rd quarter of 2025 compared to 2024, with 35,170 transactions in just three months. Over the last 12 months, activity is up 11%, even if we’re still well below the 2021 peak of 187,000 sales.

In plain English:
– Properties are changing hands again.
– Buyers have more choices than they did a year or two ago.
– Sellers are having to be more realistic on price.
Prices, meanwhile, are almost flat: across the region, they’re up a modest 0.4% year-on-year. Apartments are slightly up (+1.3% to an average of 6,230€/m²), while houses are still down a bit (–1.3% to a median of 330,800€).

For anyone buying in euros but earning dollars, Canadian dollars, or pounds, that combination—more volume, stable prices, and a still-favorable exchange rate compared to the pre-2020 era—is exactly the kind of window you want to walk through, not stare at.
Paris proper: a soft landing at 9,700€/m²
LET’S START WITH THE CITY EVERYONE ASKS US ABOUT FIRST: PARIS
Over the last 12 months, 27,410 apartments changed hands in Paris. That’s only +5% compared to a historically low year, which tells you the city is still digesting the post-COVID, high-rate shock. But in just the 3rd quarter, sales were up 12% compared to 2024, so the momentum is clearly improving.
Prices in Paris ticked up 1.9% year-on-year, with an average of 9,700€/m². We’ve come off the 10,500–11,000€/m² highs of the late 2010s, and for now the Notaires expect prices to more or less hover around this level, not shoot to the moon.

What matters for you is where you buy inside the city:
– In the most expensive pockets—Notre-Dame in the 4th, Saint-Germain-des-Prés and Monnaie in the 6th, Saint-Thomas-d’Aquin in the 7th, Champs-Élysées in the 8th, you’re looking at around 15,000€/m² and up. These are the “trophy” addresses that hold long-term value and rarely go out of style.
– At the more affordable end, you still have neighborhoods in the 18th and 19th—La Chapelle, La Goutte-d’Or, Pont de Flandre, Amérique, La Villette—where prices run roughly 6,800–7,700€/m². That’s less than half of Saint-Germain for the same square meter of Paris sky.

For many of my North American clients, the outer arrondissements used to be “Plan B.” In 2025, they’re increasingly Plan A: cafés are trendier, streets are livelier, and the metro gets you to the Seine faster than your Uber in Los Angeles ever did.
If you’ve been dreaming of Paris-proper ownership but are nervous about timing, this is what a soft landing looks like: prices that have corrected, are now stabilizing, and a city that’s still the most desired address in the world.
PETITE COURONNE: THE INNER RING GROWS UP
Just beyond the Paris city limits—Neuilly, Boulogne-Billancourt, Levallois, Vincennes, Saint-Ouen, Montreuil, and so on—the Petite Couronne has quietly become one of the most interesting playgrounds for buyers.
In the 3rd quarter, apartment sales in the Petite Couronne rose 12% year over year (to 9,070 deals), with particularly strong rebounds in Seine-Saint-Denis (+20%) and Hauts-de-Seine.
Prices are edging up, but still reasonable:
– Average of 5,000€/m² for apartments, +1.2% in a year.
– Some classic “expat favorites” like Boulogne-Billancourt, Courbevoie, Vincennes, Saint-Maur, and Neuilly-sur-Seine continue to sit above the average, but the increases remain modest and, in some communes, prices are still slightly negative year-on-year.
For houses, the story is even more interesting:
– Sales volumes are up 12% in a year.
– Prices are still down –2.1% year-on-year, with a median around 394,100€ and signs of stabilization expected by January 2026.
Translation: if you want a little garden, a family-friendly environment, and to stay close to Paris, this inner ring of suburbs is on sale relative to a few years ago, but not for long. As prices flatten out, the discount window will slowly close.
GRANDE COURONNE AND HOUSES: WHERE THE ACTION REALLY IS
Now let’s go a bit farther out—the Grande Couronne (Seine-et-Marne, Essonne, Yvelines, Val-d’Oise). This is where the Notaires see the strongest rebound, especially for houses.
– House sales are up 18% in one year and 11% over two years, making it the most dynamic segment in the entire region.
– Prices are still slightly down (–0.9% year-on-year) at around 304,500€, but the projections suggest a +2.1% rise between January 2025 and January 2026.
In other words, the market is already turning.
For apartments in the Grande Couronne:
– Volumes are up 11% in the quarter compared to 2024.
– Prices are basically flat at around 3,230€/m² (+0.2% year-on-year), with many communes in the low-to-mid 2,000€/m² range.
This is where you seriously start asking yourself:
“Do I want to be in central Paris, or do I want a house, a garden, and a home office for the price of a tiny pied-à-terre?”
For families relocating, remote workers, or retirees who don’t need to be on the Left Bank every single day, the trade-off can be very attractive. And because this segment is just coming out of its dip, there is still room to negotiate—especially on properties that have been sitting.
INVESTORS ON THE SIDELINES = LESS COMPETITION FOR YOU
One of the more important messages in the report is what’s not happening: the return of the small French investor.
According to the Notaires, volumes are still held back by the withdrawal of individual investors since the end of the Pinel tax incentive scheme, compounded by uncertainty over future taxation and a possible new private-landlord status. Add to that an unstable political and macro-economic environment, and many French households are hesitating to commit their savings to property.
For my North American readers, that may sound worrying—but in practice, it means:
– Fewer domestic investors are snapping up the best rental properties.
– More bargaining power for you as a cash buyer or well-financed purchaser.
– A market increasingly driven by primary residence buyers, not speculators.
If you’re buying to live here full- or part-time, you are exactly the kind of buyer keeping this market moving.

Putting this all together, here’s how we see the 3rd quarter 2025 market in Grand Paris:
– Prices have corrected and are now stabilizing, not collapsing.
– Volumes are clearly up, especially for houses and in the outer rings.
– Investors are still shy, which gives lifestyle buyers more room.
– Projections to early 2026 point to continued stability with gentle increases in some segments (notably houses in the Grande Couronne and apartments region-wide).
If you wait for “perfect” clarity—on rates, politics, or tax rules—you’ll wait forever. What we have now is a rational market, sellers who are listening, and a once-in-a-decade chance to step in after the decline but before the next sustained up-cycle.
If you’re ready to explore where your budget and lifestyle fit into this new Grand Paris landscape—whether that’s a compact pied-à-terre in the 18th, a family flat in Boulogne, or a house with a garden in Yvelines, we are here to help you read between the Notaires’ lines and turn statistics into keys in your hand.
A bientôt,
Adrian Leeds
The Adrian Leeds Group®
Adrian, by Wendy Paton
P.S. This IS what we do! We make finding your perfect pied-à-terre in Paris or Nice (or elsewhere) hassle-free! To learn more about our service, visit our website.
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