The Baltic States of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania are located in northeast Europe on the Baltic Sea, neighbouring Poland and Russia. Could they be the next big thing?
By Gordon Miller
The three countries are generally grouped together from a geographical perspective - and because their property markets are similar - but they do not operate as a federation; each is a sovereign nation and has its own democratically elected government.
The Baltic States were little known to most Westerners prior to the fall of Communism, but each has a history that dates back several centuries. Their capital cities are listed as UNESCO World Heritage sites: Vilnius, Lithuania, is a maze of Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque architecture; Riga, Latvia, has sublime Art Nouveau buildings, which escaped the worst of the Soviet era's ravages and philistinism. Today, the cities' attractive medieval centres - Tallinn's is arguably the prettiest - are the main tourism drivers that are helping to boost their respective economies.
Investors, whose lemming-like leap into the market created the inflationary bubble, may not be thrilled with the downturn but everyone else should be delighted that these pretty cities are once more affordable. Expect to pay from around £120,000 for a modernised one-bedroom apartment in Tallinn's old town. A modern one-bedroom apartment on the city's outskirts can be picked up for around £60,000. Much like everywhere else, property prices are still falling in the Baltic States but by not as much as they did in 2008. As for the future, who can tell? But it seems the bottom of the market has yet to be reached.
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