Bulgarian Property Market Insight
by: Steve Avery
The phenomenal interest in Bulgarian property
shown by shrewd buyers during the last two years has been compounded
by a sudden surge in golf course development.
At the present time there are only three golf
courses in the whole of Bulgaria: one at Elin Pelin, near the
capital, Sofia, and two owned by Air Sofia. These are located at
Ihtiman, opened in 2000, 40km from Sofia, and at Sliven, opened in
2004, 90km from the Black Sea.
Because of the increasingly rapid rise in foreign
interest in Bulgaria recently, several more golf courses are
proposed. One of these will be located at Razgrad, in the
north-east, about 90km from the Black Sea. More are scheduled to
open in the next few years: two at Kavarna and one at Primorsko,
near Sozopol.
Mountain and ski areas will be represented by a
golf course in the ski town of Bansko this year, and a very large
golf complex between Kostenets and Borovets, the country's foremost
ski resort. This is scheduled for 2007, the year of Bulgaria's entry
into the European Union, and will be located at Dolna Banya, already
near Bulgaria's first golf course at Ihtiman.
BulgariaProperties.net Ltd has purchased almost 6
acres of prime development land adjacent to the proposed golf course
at Dolna Banya. The plans are to construct about 220 apartments
around a comprehensive sports complex, with access to the golf
course by a short footpath. The amenities on site are to include
tennis, volleyball, squash, badminton, lawn bowls, boules (boccia),
shooting, archery, croquet, mountain biking, and fishing nearby.
Indoor facilities will include a 140-seat main restaurant and
cabaret stage, a huge main bar (perhaps the largest in Bulgaria), a
sports bar with projection TV, snooker, pool, table football, table
tennis, a Chinese restaurant, Indian restaurant, fast food
cafeteria, pizzeria, gymnasium, sauna, massage parlour, clinic,
chemist, sports shop and minimarket.
Steve Avery, a Director of BulgariaProperties.net
Ltd, said, “It may sound like a cliché, but we really were in the
right place at the right time! After two years in this business, I
just couldn’t believe my luck to find such a gem. Anyone involved in
this project should make a serious return on their investment.”
On Borovets and Bansko generally, Steve had this
to say: “Apart from having ski lifts and ski runs, these two towns
are quite different from each other, and appeal to different groups
of people. Bansko is an old, traditional residential town with lots
of character and no fewer than 180 quaint taverns full of local
people singing and dancing to a typical Bulgarian folk band.
Borovets, by contrast, is purely a resort, with hotels, modern west
European-style bars and night-clubs, cafés and restaurants.
Residential property and holiday homes are therefore readily
available in Bansko, but not in Borovets, where the closest you can
get is usually in one of the surrounding villages.
‘As for property values, Bansko went mad for a
period of three months at the end of 2003, with land prices
doubling, and then calmed down. Many poor goatherders suddenly found
that they were rich. Nothing wrong with that, I say. Since then
values have been pretty steady there until now, when they’re
starting to creep up again. The reason for this is that the sudden
surge in foreign tourists to Bansko has left the supply of holiday
accommodation woefully short of the demand. And this trend shows no
sign of abating. To try to cope with it, there have sprung up many
hotels and apartment projects, but it seems unlikely that even these
will be able to satisfy the demand for accommodation for several
years yet. As a result, the prices for such apartments range from
1,000 Euros per sq.m. for a ground-floor unit facing away from the
mountains, to 1,350 Euros per sq.m. for a top-floor example with a
mountain view. Yet, people buy them. I guess, because a 1 bedroom
60sq.m. apartment for £41,000 is still a far better deal than you’d
get in Spain. I’ve heard developers claim that 90% of their
apartments are sold within 3 weeks! I only hope that we have such
luck when ours are released in April!
‘In this respect Borovets, again, is different.
Although it’s Bulgaria’s first and best-known ski resort, it
stagnated for years… until now. The ‘Super Borovets’ project, funded
by EU, governmental, foreign and local business sources, is
scheduled to run from 2005 to 2009, and will revitalise the whole
region around the town to a radius of 10-12km. This has already
started to affect property values in the surrounding areas. To give
an example, in March 2004 we bought, unseen, a half-acre plot in a
village 15km from Borovets. When I visited it, I discovered that it
wasn’t suitable for building apartments; so, I put it on the market
in August. By November it was sold at an 80% profit – after all
costs were deducted!
‘I am personally of the opinion that the ‘Bansko
effect’ could strike around Borovets at any moment. That’s the
reason why BulgariaProperties.net Ltd is developing four projects
here, and only two in Bansko. We can sell these apartments about 15%
cheaper – at the moment, anyway. Borovets must surely offer a better
return on investment, regardless of the type of property bought:
land, a shack, whatever. You won’t find new apartments easily,
though. As far as we know, BulgariaProperties.net Ltd is the only
developer building them. I don’t, however, expect this monopoly to
last for long.
‘Bulgaria’s third ski region is at Pamporovo,
which, like Borovets, is purely a resort. Funding is starting to
come in, but full development, if it happens at all, is likely to
follow several years behind Borovets. Its distance from Sofia (a
day’s drive) makes it less attractive to visitors from north and
west Europe. It is, however, popular with Greeks, because of its
proximity to the frontier. One of Bulgaria’s major motorway routes
to Greece will pass very close to Pamporovo, and this should boost
its popularity, as well as making the Mediterranean Sea more
accessible.
‘Property values are lower here than in Bansko
and Borovets, but are creeping up gradually. I reckon that Pamporovo
is a good long-term prospect; say five to ten years. The only reason
why BulgariaProperties.net Ltd has no developments here is because
I’ll probably have retired before the boom happens.”
How does a mountain area investment compare with
coastal properties?
“Significant differences yet again. Until
recently, most of the investment was flooding into the northern
Black Sea coast resorts, from Varna down to Sunny Beach. The area
became very popular as a result of the Bulgarian government’s
‘Bulgaria the Beautiful’ TV campaign back in the ‘80s, and the
subsequent interest of package tour operators. Now that the north is
saturated with developments, the interest has begun to creep down
the coast. This is causing a steep rise in property values. They are
still lower than those in the north, but the gap is closing. An
investment in the south should therefore offer a better ROI.
‘Don’t expect, though, the ambience of the south
to become like that of the north. When I discussed the subject with
the Chairman of the Bulgarian Foreign Investment Agency last year –
an extremely intelligent and able young man, I must add – he told me
in no uncertain terms that he did not want the south to become like
the north. His very words were: “We don’t want another Benidorm.”
So, prospective property purchasers need to bear this in mind, and
balance their desire for more capital growth, or their willingness
to accept less, with the different rental market appeal of the two
regions, along with their own taste in holidays.
‘There is one highly significant factor, however,
which very often goes unnoticed until it is too late; and it applies
to the whole coast. Most people don’t know that it freezes on the
coast in winter. When they see the coastal resorts basking in the
hot summer sunshine, it’s difficult to imagine snow on the ground.
The entire coast simply shuts down in the winter, and nothing
happens. It’s a dead as a doornail. Therefore, rental income can be
fairly assured for 15 weeks, possibly 20, plus some odd bits in the
shoulder seasons of April and October. The coast has a five-month
season from May to September, compared to nine months in the ski
areas. Those people buying only for rental income, therefore, would
find the mountains far more lucrative.
‘Rents vary greatly, and depend on many factors,
most of which should be obvious: location, size, view, amenities.
The standard of finish and the condition of the property can also
determine your market quite radically. To appeal to west Europeans,
and to command the highest rents, your property must be well
finished and appointed, and be in tip-top condition. If it is not,
you still have a market for east Europeans, who tolerate less
salubrious surroundings because they pay much less, usually about
half of the west European rates.
‘Generally, summer rental rates on the coast
equate to winter rates in the ski resorts, both seasons being about
five months. Remember that you also have about four months’
additional rent, though at lower rates, during the summer in the
mountains. These rates should increase gradually, as the Government
programmes to make the ski towns more popular for summer holidays
make their mark.
‘There are several Bulgarian agencies willing to
manage your rental properties for you. Expect to pay about 20% of
the rent as a fee.”
What about properties in the countryside?
“Not a serious contender in the ROI stakes, I
think. Not if you consider the effort involved. You can pick up
property very cheaply indeed in the inland areas, away from the
resorts. Almost always it’ll need some kind of work; anything from a
face-lift to demolition. There’s often no inner staircase to the
bedrooms, no bathroom, and the toilet is in a shed in the garden.
This kind of property is great for buyers who want to get away from
their homeland, and disappear in the beauty of nature permanently.
As a business, it could appeal to self-builders or DIY enthusiasts,
prepared to do it for fun, and accept a low return on their
financial and physical investment. As for rental income, forget it!”
And the cities?
“Again, there are differences, even between
cities. The prime city is, of course, Sofia, the capital. Buy the
right apartment here, in the right area, and you can expect a
guaranteed rental return of about 12% per annum. The flavour of the
month is gated communities, particularly in the south of the city.
The diplomatic residential district of Vitosha is one of the best
bets. There is a ready demand for luxury accommodation from
diplomatic staff and executives seconded by foreign companies,
usually on a long-term basis, and this demand should increase as
2007, the year of Bulgaria’s accession to the European Union,
approaches. Although you should expect to pay high for such
properties by Bulgarian standards, it’s still only the price of a
tarted-up Victorian terraced flat in a UK provincial town.
‘There’s virtually no market for tourist rentals
in Sofia, as it’s probably the least interesting European capital
city. It’s also very polluted, although they are trying to clean up
their act, ready for EU entry in 2007.
‘Plovdiv, the country’s second city, is much more
pleasant. It has a quaint old town, as well as modern business
districts. It therefore bridges the gap between business and
tourism, as far as rentals are concerned. Plovdiv is connected to
Sofia by an excellent motorway, on which you can keep the pedal to
the metal, if you’re prepared to risk an on-the-spot fine of 50 Leva
(about £18).
‘Veliko Tarnovo is probably Bulgaria’s most
touristic city, with its citadel and mediaeval ramparts. Most people
who buy property here do so to make it their main home. The city
itself is beautiful, and it has everything a townie needs. Drive a
short distance, and you’re in some wonderful countryside. You
couldn’t really make a good living from rentals, but it’s the
perfect place to retire to.
‘There’s one more thing which is important enough
to mention: Mineral baths. These exist all over Bulgaria, the most
significant being at Narechen, south of Plovdiv, and Momin Prohod,
near Kostenets. Scientific studies rank Bulgaria among the foremost
in Europe for hydrothermal, bioclimatic and mud treatments, sea
cures and other health resources. Bulgaria is a world leader with
its exceptional diversity of medicinal herbs and the excellent
curative properties of its apian products. Any property near a spa
should attract a premium to its sales or rental value.”
Full details about the ‘Super Borovets’ project,
price madness in Bansko, golf developments in Bulgaria, and new
apartments in Bansko and Borovets can be seen at the
BulgariaProperties.net Ltd web site www.BulgariaProperties.net. Or
you can e-mail advice@BulgariaProperties.net, or call the company at
+44 (0)871 226 2296 to order a free 28-page hand-out, or just for a
chat, if you prefer. They always have time for you.
About The Author
This article is the copyright of Steve Avery, of
BulgariaProperties.net Ltd. All rights reserved.