Real estate & construction data: transactions, permits and valuations
Property and construction decisions hinge on data that is scattered across registries, planning bodies, valuation sources and risk models. This guide covers what real estate and construction data exists, how to source it, and how to combine it into a usable picture.
Why property data matters now
Valuation, development and investment all depend on combining many data layers, and physical-climate risk is now part of the picture. External data brings transactions, permits, market dynamics and hazard exposure together.
The real estate & construction data landscape
- Transactions and valuations: prices, valuation indicators and rental-market data.
- Planning and permits: building permits and planning data.
- Construction activity: project pipelines and material-demand signals.
- Performance and use: energy-performance and occupancy data.
- Risk and context: flood-risk, land-use and urban-development data.
Common use cases
Valuation and investment analysis, development feasibility and site selection, portfolio and asset management, energy and retrofit planning, and physical-risk assessment.
Sourcing considerations
Coverage and granularity vary by country and registry, and addresses and identifiers rarely line up cleanly, so geospatial matching is central. Some transaction and valuation data is licensed restrictively, and personal data appears where records tie to individuals.
Delivery and cadence
Most use cases use periodic batches in analytical or geospatial formats; some market and risk feeds update more frequently. Consistent geocoding and reference frames are essential for combining layers.
Governance and privacy
Where data relates to individuals (for example, named owners), the GDPR applies. Provenance and licensing documentation matter for valuation, lending and tender work.
Combining the property data layers
Property analysis is fundamentally a data-integration problem: transactions, attributes, planning, energy performance, tenure and risk layers each live in a different source with a different identifier. The value emerges only when they are joined on a common property and location reference. That is why address and parcel matching is the make-or-break step, get it wrong and you attach the wrong attributes to the wrong building.
Geocoding and matching challenges
Addresses are messy: formats vary, units and sub-buildings complicate matching, and registry and commercial sources disagree. Robust workflows validate addresses against an authoritative reference, geocode to a consistent coordinate system, and use deterministic plus probabilistic matching to resolve the same property across sources. Measuring match rate and accuracy, and documenting them, is part of delivering trustworthy property data.
A real estate data checklist
- Which layers (transactions, attributes, planning, EPC, risk) does the use case need?
- How are properties matched and geocoded across sources, and at what accuracy?
- Is climate physical-risk data included where relevant?
- Are transaction and valuation licences confirmed for your use?
- Where records relate to individuals, is the GDPR addressed?
- Property decisions depend on combining many scattered data layers.
- Geospatial matching of addresses and parcels is the core sourcing challenge.
- Climate physical-risk data is now part of property analysis.
- Confirm licensing for transaction and valuation data; document provenance.
Sources & further reading
- Eurostat: housing and construction statistics, house price index.
- European Environment Agency: flood-risk and land-use data.
- National land registries and planning authorities.
- EUR-Lex: Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (GDPR).
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