Pakistan’s housing market is starting to move into a more structured phase. For years, demand has remained strong, but the system around it has been fragmented. Mortgage access stayed limited, investor protections were uneven, and regulation often moved more slowly than the market itself.
That is now beginning to change. For overseas Pakistanis in particular, this matters because housing policy, financing, and market structure appear to be moving in the same direction at the same time.
That shift is becoming clearer through both government action and market indicators. Measures now being discussed or developed include financing access of up to PKR 10 million for first-time buyers, a 5% fixed interest rate framework, legal reforms, stamp duty relief under consideration, and stronger protections for overseas and foreign investors. There is also growing attention on transaction security, including escrow-style mechanisms that could improve confidence in the market.
A more structured housing market is beginning to take shape
The wider point is not any single reform. It is a fact that multiple parts of the housing ecosystem are now being addressed together. Financing access matters. Regulatory reform matters. Investor protection matters. When these move at once, they can start to shift the market from informal expansion to structured growth.
This is important in a country where housing demand has never been the issue. Pakistan’s population now exceeds 240 million, and the national housing shortage is estimated at more than 9 million homes. At the same time, mortgage financing remains below 1% of GDP. That gap helps explain why the market still looks underdeveloped relative to its size.
The numbers behind Pakistan’s real estate opportunity
Current projections suggest residential real estate in Pakistan could grow at a compound annual growth rate of 7% between 2024 and 2028. Annual price growth is estimated in the 6% to 12% range, while rental yields are around 6%. The expected sector value by 2028 is put at $2.7 trillion.
Taken together, these figures point to a market that is still adjusting, rather than one that has already fully matured. That distinction matters. In early-cycle markets, value often concentrates around better-located, better-planned, and better-executed developments as buyers become more selective.
Why overseas Pakistanis are central to this cycle
Overseas Pakistanis are likely to remain at the centre of this shift. As policy becomes more aligned with investor security and formal market participation, the market becomes easier to assess on long-term fundamentals rather than short-term speculation.
For buyers looking at Pakistan from abroad, this is less about momentum alone and more about timing. A new real estate cycle appears to be forming, but pricing is still in a stage where early positioning matters. As the market becomes more structured, demand is likely to concentrate around developments built to a higher standard. That is where One Homes is building its place.