EECFA: Eastern European construction growth desynchronises from Southeast

23
Jun
2026
News - EECFA: Eastern European construction growth desynchronises from Southeast #Aleš Pustovrh #Ali Türel #Andrey Vakulenko #Bulgaria #CEE #Construction #Dejan Krajinović #EECFA #Leyla Alkan Gökler #Michael Glazer #Romania #Russia #Sebastian Sipos-Gug #SEE #Serbia #Tatjana Halapija #Türkiye #Ukraine

by Property Forum | Report

The Eastern European construction market is facing a cooling period of "little less optimism", while Southeast Europe shows signs of stabilizing with a "little less pessimism", according to the Eastern European Construction Forecasting Association (EECFA) 2026 Summer Construction Forecast released on 22 June 2026. Despite the shifting sentiment, both regions are projected to sustain the record-high output levels achieved in 2025 through to 2028.


Southeast European construction markets up to 2028

Bulgaria entered this year as the 21st eurozone member amid political turbulence that impacted construction, most notably projects relying on public funding. "Last year Bulgaria's construction sector performed strongly, largely thanks to the residential and non-residential submarkets. In 2026-2028, however, the country's total construction output could see a heterogeneous performance," says Yasen Georgiev at Economic Policy Institute (EPI), EECFA's Bulgarian member institute, who anticipates output to grow by about 2% on average in 2026-2028.

Michael Glazer (SEE Regional Advisors) and Tatjana Halapija (Nada Projekt), EECFA's members for Croatia, point to funding from the EU's Military Mobility Package (MMP) as a source of finance for a variety of Croatian projects. Transportation projects, both military and dual use, are contenders, so MMP money should lift output in those civil engineering segments. MMP will likely boost some non-residential segments too, since it can finance factories and logistics centres with a military or dual-use purpose. This will help sustain output despite declining finance under the EU's post-2022-earthquake rebuilding programmes and RRF. Energy construction remains confused, with established technologies competing with unproven alternatives, while residential is buffeted by rising prices, declining GDP growth and central bank and government interventions.

Dr Sebastian Sipos-Gug, EECFA's Romanian researcher at Ebuild, notes that Romania's construction market is in a tight spot. "Growth potential is limited, with global and national factors conspiring against it. 2026 might see a stagnant GDP, declining real wages and the highest inflation in the EU. This is coupled with national deficit causing high taxation and austerity: lower public spending, and wage and hiring freezes for public employees. Construction costs are again on the rise due to climbing energy prices and labour costs. The saving grace is EU programmes funding infrastructure, yet with the NRRP running out in mid-2026, the boost is limited. Adding to this is a political crisis that could lead to a government change at a critical moment. But most of these issues should be transitory. By 2028 Romania's construction might return to growth on the back of improved economic indicators, inflation within target, a more efficient energy sector and a more stable political situation."

"Serbia's overall construction output is still consolidating in 2026, led by the correction in civil engineering, while buildings continue to grow," says Dejan Krajinović, EECFA's Serbian Researcher at Beobuild. Residential remains stable with moderate growth, while non-residential is driven by investments related to EXPO 2027, with double-digit growth expected in 2026. Office, commercial and hotel segments benefit, and health-related construction is breaking records. The civil engineering consolidation is anticipated to end in 2027, with new growth in 2028 as large-scale infrastructure projects launch a next growth cycle. "Slovenia's construction output held at just under €6 billion in 2024 and 2025 but is set to edge higher, supported mainly by public spending," says Dr Aleš Pustovrh at Bogatin, EECFA Slovenia. Residential remains constrained by limited supply and rising costs, while offices, retail and industry face cautious investors. Publicly financed segments such as education, health and civil engineering renovation provide stability.

Eastern European construction markets up to 2028

The worsening outlook in Russia, predicted to register the biggest decline, has deteriorated the region's prospects. Yet EECFA still thinks Türkiye could get close to its 2018 peak, while Ukraine's current trajectory is a recovery rather than a post-war boom. According to Andrey Vakulenko at Macon, EECFA's Russian research institute, the downward trend in Russia's construction market, which began in 2025, is likely to intensify in 2026-2027. The main reason is a decelerating economy and prolonged high interest rates, which limit financing and investment. Residential is under the strongest pressure amid reduced mortgage availability and declining demand. Civil engineering will likely stay the most resilient subsector due to major transport and energy projects, and the market could return to a growth trajectory in 2028.

"In Türkiye, state involvement in housing development has grown in recent years," say Prof Ali Türel and Prof Leyla Alkan Gökler, EECFA's Turkish researchers. "Policies to curb inflation have depressed disposable income, creating a housing affordability issue as prices and rents have spiked. The government has intervened, launching residential projects affordable to households not owning a house, built by the Housing Development Administration (HDA). Since HDA has also rebuilt about 550,000 dwellings damaged in the February 2023 quake, the share of public-sector housing has risen, while the private sector's share has declined from about 90%. The forecast indicates total construction output in Türkiye may reach TL 5 trillion (€93 billion) in 2028, at 2025 prices."

"Ukraine's construction market showed resilience in 2025 despite the ongoing war. While it nominally returned to pre-war levels last year, it was still 40% below the 2021 output at comparable prices," notes Professor Sergii Zapototskyi at Uvecon, EECFA Ukraine. "Key growth drivers were commercial, industrial, warehouse and logistics developments, residential construction in safer regions, and projects to restore public and transport infrastructure. In the coming years, the market is expected to grow, supported by reconstruction needs, government housing programmes and international funding. The future performance will largely depend on the security situation, investment resources, labour shortages and the effectiveness of government reconstruction policies."




Latest news


New leases

  • International flexible office operator SwitchUp has launched its expansion into the Polish market, securing a lease agreement for 2,100 sqm of space at the AFI Office House in Warsaw. The transaction represents the company’s debut contract in Poland, positioning the operator within the first office building of the city’s upcoming Towarowa22 regeneration development. Savills acted as the deal broker.
  • International retailer MR.DIY has joined the tenant mix of the Plejada Shopping Centre in Sosnowiec. Its new 700 sqm store will significantly enhance the shopping centre’s offering of household products and everyday essentials. Cushman & Wakefield is responsible for the leasing and comprehensive management of the property.
  • Hotspot Workhub, the flexible workspace operator, has renewed and expanded its presence within The Mark office building, owned by CPI Property Group. The lease deal for 2,550 sqm was brokered by iO Partners Romania.

New appointments

  • Katarína Brydone, Jana Vlková and Vendula Maršová have been appointed as the first Equity Partners of Colliers’ Czech business. Brydone brings more than 20 years of experience in international real estate. Vlková has more than 25 years of experience in commercial real estate. Maršová, Partner and Head of Valuation and Advisory Services, brings more than 16 years of experience in real estate valuation and advisory.
  • BNP Paribas Real Estate Poland has expanded its Industrial and Logistics Agency team with the appointments of Joanna Choromańska, formerly of JLL, and Bartosz Wilczyński, previously with CBRE. The new hires bring a combined 34 years of experience in sector sales, lease negotiations, and build-to-suit project delivery to support the division's ongoing growth.
  • Speedwell has expanded its industrial and logistics team with the appointment of Valentin Achim as Leasing and Property Manager for Industrial Developments. Achim brings extensive experience in coordinating commercial and operational activities within the logistics and industrial sectors. In his new role, he will oversee the development and expansion of the company's Spaceplus platform.


Latest news

News - Griffin and Primestar launch JV for Polish hotel investments
22
Jun
2026

Griffin and Primestar launch JV for Polish hotel investments

by Property Forum
Griffin Capital Partners and Primestar Group have launched Prime Griffin Hotels, a 50/50 joint venture established to build a hotel platform in Poland. Operating within a single platform, the venture aims to capitalise on the growth of the Polish hospitality sector through an integrated model.
Read more >
News - JLL Real Estate Industry Charity Beach Volleyball Tournament is back in 2026
22
Jun
2026

JLL Real Estate Industry Charity Beach Volleyball Tournament is back in 2026

by Property Forum
For the 15th time, the real estate industry will join forces for a noble cause and once again will play to support the Ronald McDonald House Poland Foundation. This year’s edition of the JLL Charity Beach Volleyball Tournament will take place on August 6 at the Monta Beach Volley Club in Warsaw. Following the success of funding the construction of the Ronald McDonald House at The Children’s Memorial Health Institute in Warsaw, the industry is keeping up the momentum and will once again support the families of young patients. The funds raised this year will be allocated to the maintenance and operation of the newly opened House. Property Forum proudly supports the event as media partner.
Read more >
News - HelloParks sells logistics facility in Fót to international investor
22
Jun
2026

HelloParks sells logistics facility in Fót to international investor

by Property Forum
HelloParks has signed an agreement to sell its FT1 logistics warehouse in the Fót (Budapest North) megapark to an international investor.
Read more >


Property Forum ABOUT US

Property Forum is a leading event hub in the CEE real estate industry with over 10 years of experience. We organise conferences, business breakfasts and workshops focused on real estate, in London, Vienna, Warsaw, Budapest, Bucharest, Bratislava, Prague, Zagreb and Sofia, amongst other locations.
Please send press releases to
newsdesk AT property-forum DOT eu
MORE >

CONTACT

NEWSLETTER

 

Property Forum © 2017 – 2026 | Terms & conditions | Privacy policy