As luxury prices grip central neighbourhoods, investors and social housing operators are racing to Lambrate, where bold regeneration and mixed-income projects are reshaping the industrial east.
As vacancy rates stabilise across the city's hottest neighbourhoods, the numbers reveal which micro-markets are delivering genuine returns—and where landlords are chasing phantom yields.
New planning regulations around heritage protection and mixed-use development are fundamentally rewriting where Milan's ultra-high-net-worth buyers are investing.
With average prices hovering near €5,000 per square metre, Milan's entry-level market is tighter than ever—but new grants and financing options are reshaping what's possible for young buyers.
Distressed property sales across Isola and outer Nolo are signalling a quiet crisis—and why social housing advocates say market signals matter more than municipal pledges.
Stricter regulations on short-term rentals and heritage zones are forcing property investors to recalculate returns across the city's most sought-after neighbourhoods.
Sweeping changes to grant structures and zoning decisions are redefining where young buyers can afford to plant roots—and how much help they'll receive.
As Milan's high-end property sector defies broader market softness, investors and owner-occupiers face a transformed landscape shaped by fashion capital demand, limited supply, and evolving buyer priorities.
As the city's property market fragments into distinct investment zones, newcomers need a strategic map to separate established prestige from emerging opportunity.
As rental demand outpaces supply across the city's most coveted neighbourhoods, savvy investors are rethinking strategy in a market where gross yields have compressed below 3%.