On 8 September, Tranio’s client Svetlana and her family bought a two-storey four-bedroom apartment on the secondary market of Alanya for 150,000 euro — the money Svetlana got after selling a two-bedroom apartment in the centre of Samara.
In the spring of 2021, Maksim, an investor from Russia, invested 3.2 million euro in a coastal villa in Bodrum. Revalued in June 2022, the villa has risen in price by 19% in euro. The investment did an excellent job at protecting the capital even without rentals. Maksim with his wife and child are spending their second season there, inviting friends and relatives, travelling to Turkey on a visa-free basis.
I should warn you, my deal took place during a time of rapid change, not only in foreign policy and economics, but also in my personal life. Over the past 6 months, I have managed to do the following: decide against buying an apartment in Turkey; change my mind and buy it under the influence of external circumstances; change my plans for this apartment; get a job in another country (not Turkey).
Vladimir recites how he and his wife have managed to pass under the old rules of Turkish citizenship by investment programme at the very last moment before the minimum threshold has been increased from 250,000 to 400,000 US dollars.
In April, at the start of sales in a boarding house under construction in Alanya, Tranio's clients and employees bought several apartments in the 50,000–60,000 euro price range with a rental yield of 7% per annum in euro.
A Tranio client who moved to Turkey describes the process of buying a flat in Antalya and her life within walking distance of the sea.
Turkey’s shooting down of a Russian fighter jet last month sparked an escalating conflict between the two countries. Maria Zharaya, Tranio director for Turkey, explains its effect on real estate market trends.