Residential Property Transactions by Non-Households
Non-Household transactions are residential dwelling transactions made by private companies, charitable organisations, and state institutions. The Residential Property Transactions by Non-Households publication provides a breakdown of Non-Household transactions by NACE Sector, and Territory of the participating organisations. Further, it contains a breakdown of transactions between and within the household and non-household residential property sectors.
The Residential Property Transactions by Non-Households is published annually on the CSO website.
The principal outputs are property volume, value, median price and mean price of properties bought and sold by Non-Household entities. The data is used extensively by national and international agencies, government departments, media and general public.
All information supplied to the CSO is treated as strictly confidential. The Statistics Act 1993 sets stringent confidentiality standards: Information collected may be used only for statistical purposes and no details that might be related to an identifiable person or business undertaking may be divulged to any other government department or body.
We make sure that it is impossible for individuals or organisations to be identified. No personal information is kept longer than 14 months
Stamp Duty Data is provided by the Revenue Commissioners under Section 30 of the Statistics Act 1993.
Building Energy Rating (BER) data is provided by the Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI) under Section 30 of the Statistics Act 1993.
Geographical data is supplied by the An Post GeoDirectory.
Niall Corkery, Statistician, RPPI Section, Prices Division, Central Statistics Office, Skehard Road, Cork, T12 X00E. Tel +353 (21) 4535052 or E-mail rppi@cso.ie
Under the General Data Protection Regulation, you have the following rights:
However, because your data is processed for statistical purposes these rights may be limited in accordance with Article 89 of the GDPR. This is due to the fact that the exercise of any of these rights may render impossible, or seriously impair, the achievement of the statistical processing and such restriction maybe necessary for the fulfillment of those purposes.