By Yiannis Misirlis

In every housing cycle, markets search for a villain. Today, in Cyprus, the spotlight has turned toward foreign, particularly non-European, buyers. The policy response now under discussion, namely stricter limitations on property sales to non-Europeans, reflects a familiar instinct: when prices rise and affordability tightens, constrain demand. 

It is an instinct that is politically understandable but economically misguided. 

The evidence, both international and local, points to a far less convenient truth. Price formation in residential real estate is not primarily driven by marginal categories of buyers, but by structural imbalances between supply and demand. In Cyprus, those imbalances are increasingly pronounced. 

Over the past decade, demand for housing has been underpinned by several durable forces: steady population growth, inward migration of skilled professionals, the expansion of services and technology sectors, and a cultural preference for home ownership. These are not transient dynamics. They form the backbone of the market. 

Supply, by contrast, remains slow, fragmented and structurally constrained. Planning delays, zoning rigidities, rising construction costs, exacerbated by persistently high energy prices, and a limited pool of skilled labour have combined to create a system that cannot respond quickly to demand. Development cycles are long; delivery is slower still. 

In such an environment, even moderate increases in demand translate into disproportionate pressure on prices. 

Foreign buyers, including non-Europeans, operate within this broader context. They do not define it. Their presence is often concentrated in specific segments of the market, particularly higher-end developments or projects with international appeal. Their share of total transactions, while visible, is not dominant in determining overall price levels. 

To suggest otherwise is to confuse visibility with causality. 

Restricting non-European buyers may, at the margin, reduce demand in certain segments. But it will not address the fundamental constraint: insufficient housing supply relative to underlying need. Indeed, such restrictions risk introducing unintended consequences. 

They may undermine Cyprus’ attractiveness as an investment and business destination at a time when the economy is increasingly reliant on international capital and talent. 

They also risk distorting market signals, discouraging development in segments that cross-subsidise broader residential supply. 

Moreover, they create the illusion of action while leaving the structural problem untouched. 

There is a deeper risk: policy misdiagnosis. 

Housing affordability is a complex, system-wide challenge. It cannot be resolved through selective demand suppression without impairing market function. The real levers lie elsewhere, in accelerating permitting processes, enabling higher-density development where appropriate, investing in infrastructure, and fostering public-private collaboration to increase supply at scale. 

Cyprus does not suffer from an excess of demand. It suffers from a deficit of delivery. 

Blaming foreign buyers may offer a politically expedient narrative. But it does not build homes. And in the absence of a credible strategy to expand supply, prices will continue to reflect the same emphasising imbalance, regardless of who is allowed to buy. 

In housing, as in economics more broadly, markets are rarely moved by the most visible actors. They are shaped by the deepest constraints. 

*Yiannis Misirlis is chairman of the Cyprus Property Developers Association