HCMC’s real estate market enters 2026 on solid macroeconomic foundations, supported by GDP growth of 8% and FDI inflows of US$38.4 billion. However, performance is increasingly diverging across property sectors. Residential supply constraints and high prices persist, while commercial real estate continues to record healthy occupancy backed by stable leasing demand. At the same time, the hospitality sector is seeing operational improvements, supported by a strong recovery in tourism.
Market performance in 2025 indicated that liquidity has returned across multiple sectors, specifically in apartments, which recorded the highest absorption in five years. Office and retail maintained solid occupancy levels, while hotels and serviced apartments saw noticeable improvements in visitors and rentals. These signals lay the groundwork for a phase of selective growth in the coming years, with a strong emphasis on quality standards and a clearer shift of new supply toward non-central districts.
Residential: FiveYear High in Liquidity, with Market Polarisation Increasing
Until 2028, HCMC will add 58,000 apartments from 80 projects, with the Eastern area accounting for 50% and maintaining a leading role in market expansion. However, in the short term, new supply is expected to remain constrained, while prices are forecast to stay elevated.
In the villa and townhouse segment, new supply surged to 4,100 units in 2025, lifting primary stock to 4,800 units, a 397% YoY increase. Transaction volumes reached 2,000 units, reflecting solid demand for largescale township projects, particularly in suburban locations. Average prices stood at VND 233 million per sq m of land, declining YoY as new supply was increasingly concentrated in noncentral districts with lower price levels than the city centre.
This suburban shift is expected to continue, with around 15,500 units scheduled for launch from 22 projects, approximately 90% of which are located in outer districts such as Can Gio, Binh Chanh, Nha Be, and District 12.
Commenting on the market, Troy Griffiths, Deputy Managing Director of Savills Vietnam, noted that “supply and liquidity are recovering strongly, while elevated price levels continue to drive clear segmentation across the market.”
.jpg)



.jpg)
(4).jpg)
.jpg)

.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)