Complete guide

How to buy your first home in Ireland

A step-by-step walkthrough of the full process — from figuring out what you can borrow to getting the keys. All information sourced from Revenue.ie, Citizens Information, and the Central Bank of Ireland.

1Know what you can borrow

Before you start viewing properties, you need to understand your borrowing ceiling. The Central Bank of Ireland sets loan-to-income (LTI) limits that all regulated lenders must follow.

Single buyer

Max 4× gross annual income

Joint buyers

Max 3.5× combined gross income

So if you earn €60,000 alone, your maximum mortgage is €240,000. If you and a partner earn €60,000 + €50,000 = €110,000 combined, your maximum is €385,000.

Important: Banks can make exceptions for up to 15% of new lending above these limits, but this is at their discretion and not guaranteed. Build your plan around the standard limits.

Lenders will also stress-test your repayments at a higher interest rate (typically 2% above the offered rate) to make sure you can still afford repayments if rates rise.

Source: Central Bank of Ireland

2Save your deposit

As a first-time buyer in Ireland, you need a minimum deposit of 10% of the purchase price. This is set by the Central Bank's loan-to-value (LTV) rules.

Min deposit (FTB)

10% of purchase price

Max LTV (FTB)

90% mortgage

For a €350,000 property, you need at least €35,000 saved. However, the Help to Buy scheme (Step 3) can contribute up to €30,000 toward this deposit if you're buying a new build.

Lenders also want to see a consistent savings history — typically 6 to 12 months of regular savings. Irregular lump sums are viewed less favourably than steady monthly contributions.

Gifts from family can be counted toward your deposit, but your lender will require a signed letter from the donor confirming it is a gift and not a loan.

Source: Citizens Information

3Government schemes

Ireland has three main government schemes to help first-time buyers. Depending on your situation, you may qualify for one or more of them.

Help to Buy (HTB)

New builds only

A tax refund of up to 10% of the purchase price, capped at €30,000. It refunds income tax and DIRT you've paid over the previous four years. The money is paid directly to the developer as part of your deposit.

  • Property must be a new build or self-build
  • Purchase price must be €500,000 or less
  • You must be a first-time buyer
  • You must take out a mortgage of at least 70% LTV
Source: Revenue.ie

First Home Scheme (FHS)

New builds only

A shared equity scheme where the government and participating banks take an equity stake in your home to bridge the gap between your mortgage and the purchase price. You don't make monthly repayments on the equity share — it's repaid when you sell or remortgage.

  • Up to 30% equity support (or 20% if you also use HTB)
  • Price caps vary by county — €475,000 in Dublin
  • New builds only; must be your primary residence
  • You must be a first-time buyer or fresh-start applicant
Source: firsthomescheme.ie

LDA Affordable Purchase

Selected sites

The Land Development Agency sells homes at below market value on State-owned land. Homes are priced based on income limits, not market rates. Unlike FHS, you fully own the property — there's no equity share.

  • Income limit: €96,000 for single buyers, €128,000 for couples
  • Available on specific LDA sites only — check lda.ie for active locations
  • Priority given to those who live or work in the area
Source: lda.ie

Use our calculator to instantly see which schemes you qualify for based on your salary, savings, and target price. Try it now →

4Get mortgage approval

There are two stages to mortgage approval:

A

Agreement in Principle (AIP)

Also called Approval in Principle or a Mortgage in Principle. This is a written confirmation from a lender of how much they're willing to lend you, subject to full application and property valuation. It's not a binding offer, but it's essential before making an offer on a property. AIPs typically last 6–12 months.

B

Formal (loan) offer

Once you go sale agreed on a specific property, you submit a full mortgage application. The bank will require a professional valuation of that property. If approved, they issue a formal loan offer — a binding mortgage contract you sign and return.

Using a mortgage brokeris worth considering — they have access to all lenders and can find you the best rate. In Ireland, brokers are typically paid by the lender, so there's usually no direct cost to you.

Documents you'll typically need: 6 months of bank statements, 3 months of payslips (or 2 years of accounts if self-employed), your most recent P60 or employer letter, photo ID, and proof of address.
Source: Citizens Information

5Find a property

The main property portals in Ireland are Daft.ie and MyHome.ie. You can filter by county, price, property type, and number of bedrooms.

When viewing properties, check the Building Energy Rating (BER) — this is a legal requirement for all properties listed for sale. A higher BER (A or B) means lower energy bills. Homes with a BER below C can be expensive to heat.

You can look up the sale history of any property that sold after 2010 on the Residential Property Price Register — a public record of all property transactions in Ireland.

6Make an offer

Offers are made verbally through the selling estate agent — not in writing. If your offer is accepted, you're not legally bound until contracts are signed (see Step 7).

Once the seller accepts your offer you go sale agreed. At this point you typically pay a booking deposit (usually €5,000–€10,000) to the estate agent to take the property off the market. This is refundable if the sale falls through before contracts are signed.

Note:"Sale agreed" is not legally binding in Ireland. Either party can walk away before contracts are exchanged, though this is considered poor practice and the booking deposit is refundable if you do.

If you're bidding on a second-hand property there may be competition. Have your AIP letter ready — vendors and agents take offers more seriously from buyers who have finance confirmed.

You must instruct a solicitor before contracts are signed. Your solicitor will:

  • Carry out title searches to confirm the seller legally owns the property
  • Check planning permission for any extensions or alterations
  • Review the contract for sale and raise any queries with the vendor's solicitor
  • Handle the transfer of funds on closing day
  • Register the property in your name with the Property Registration Authority

Once both solicitors are satisfied, contracts are exchanged. At this point you pay a further deposit (typically 10% of the purchase price, minus the booking deposit already paid). The sale is now legally binding.

A closing dateis then agreed — usually 4–8 weeks after exchange. On closing day your solicitor transfers the balance of the purchase price to the vendor's solicitor and you receive the keys.

Source: Citizens Information

8Survey and valuation

Two separate inspections are required — don't confuse them:

Structural Survey

Commissioned by you — an independent engineer or surveyor inspects the property for structural defects, damp, roof condition, and other issues. Costs €300–€600. Never skip this — defects can be very costly post-purchase.

Mortgage Valuation

Commissioned by your lender — a valuer confirms the property is worth what you're paying. Costs €150–€200. This protects the bank, not you — it is not a structural inspection.

If your structural survey reveals significant issues, you can use this to renegotiate the price or, in serious cases, withdraw from the sale and reclaim your booking deposit.

9Drawdown and completion

Before your lender releases the mortgage funds (drawdown), they will require:

  • Home insurance — buildings cover must be in place from the day of drawdown. The bank needs to be named on the policy.
  • Life assurance / mortgage protection — required by law in Ireland. It pays off your mortgage if you die during the term.
  • Signed loan offer — you must have returned your signed formal mortgage offer.
  • Solicitor's certificate — confirming title is clear and the sale can proceed.

On closing day, your solicitor receives the mortgage funds and your own deposit, transfers the full purchase price to the vendor, and you collect the keys. Your solicitor then registers the title in your name — this can take several weeks after closing.

Source: Citizens Information

Costs to budget for

On top of your deposit and mortgage, budget for the following. These cannot be added to your mortgage — they must be paid in cash.

CostAmount
Stamp duty1% of purchase price
Solicitor fees€1,500–€3,000
Structural survey€300–€600
Mortgage valuation€150–€200
Land registry fees€400–€800
Home insurance€300–€600/yr
Mortgage protectionVaries by age
Moving costs€500–€2,000+

As a rough rule: budget an additional 1.5–2% of the purchase price for purchase costs on top of your deposit.

Ready to run your numbers?

Use our free calculator to see exactly which schemes you qualify for and what your maximum purchase budget looks like.

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