June 2026 · Week 5 · Košice

Buying in Košice: where a house costs barely more than a flat

By Ground Scanner Editorial · 29 June 2026

Slovakia's second city through a buyer's eyes — the three-room market, the house-versus-flat decision that hardly exists here, and how it stacks up against Bratislava and the regions.

Live market data · updated daily
Apartments · Sale214 950 €3 330 €/m²240 listings
Houses · Sale229 900 €468 €/m²89 listings
Apartments · Rent780 €126 listings
How Košice compares · apartment €/m²
Bratislava
4 316 €/m²
Banská Bystrica
3 333 €/m²
Košice
3 330 €/m²
Žilina
3 230 €/m²
Nitra
2 367 €/m²
Prievidza
1 785 €/m²
Median apartment price in Košice by size
1-room18 listings
140 500 €
2-room72 listings
189 900 €
3-room106 listings
223 200 €
4-room22 listings
307 500 €

The typical Košice home

Start with the median, because in Košice it describes something real: a three-room apartment at around €223,000, or roughly €3,300 per square metre. That's the everyday Košice home, and three-room flats make up close to half the market — a far more concentrated middle than most Slovak cities have. Whatever you're after here, this is the gravity the rest of the market orbits.

Across all sizes the median sits a little lower, near €215,000, and the city's ~€3,300/m² makes it Slovakia's clear number two: well below Bratislava's ~€4,300, but a definite step above the regional towns. It's the second-deepest market in the country, so the numbers have the volume to be trusted.

The house–flat line that barely exists

Here's where Košice parts ways with the capital. In Bratislava, buyers spend real energy weighing a city apartment against a house on the fringe, because a house there costs roughly 1.5× a flat. In Košice that tension nearly disappears: the median house asks about €230,000, barely above the €215,000 median flat. A house and an apartment cost almost the same money.

That single fact reshapes the decision. Where a Bratislava buyer trades space for a steep premium, a Košice buyer can often choose a house — garden, no shared walls — for close to flat money, and the question becomes location and lifestyle rather than budget. It's the kind of comparison you only see when you look at both markets at once.

Why trading up costs less drama here

The chart above lays out the size ladder in full; the thing worth saying about it is how gentle the steps are. The smallest flats still carry the steepest price per metre — a sub-40 m² studio is the worst value by the metre, even when its sticker price looks tempting — but above that, moving up a room rarely means a dramatic jump. That gentleness is exactly why a house slips so naturally into the mix: when one more room costs only modestly more, a whole house for flat money stops looking like a stretch and starts looking like a choice.

Cheaper than the capital — except to rent

On price, Košice is the value play: buying costs about a third less per square metre than Bratislava. But the discount is fussy about how you take it. Rents barely follow that sale-price gap — the median flat rents for about €780 a month, almost level with Bratislava's ~€800. So the saving is real only if you buy; rent here and you've left most of it on the table — a cleaner case for ownership than the capital makes.

New or old: a wide gap, read it carefully

One number stands out and deserves a careful read. Newer apartments — built roughly 2010 onward — ask on the order of 45% more per square metre than older stock here, a far steeper new-build premium than Bratislava's ~15–20%. A fast-developing second city rewards 'new' much more sharply than a mature capital does.

But treat that figure as a signal, not gospel. It rests on a small number of new-build listings at any moment, and construction year isn't reported on every ad. If a new build is on your shortlist, check the specific project's age, energy rating and fees at the source rather than leaning on the citywide average.

What it means if you're buying here

Three things to carry away. A house is a genuine option, not an upgrade — at Košice prices it competes head-on with a large flat. The new-build premium is steep, so weigh it deliberately rather than by reflex. And the value sits in buying, not renting, which tilts the rent-versus-buy maths toward owning. Every figure here is a median, computed per property type after we de-duplicate listings across portals and drop the reserved ones; we refresh it daily, and the live panel shows today's exact values. For the full size breakdown see the live Košice price page, or jump straight to the Košice listings.

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