Housing and urban planning in 2026 continues to be influenced by public measures focused on affordability and increasing supply, with direct impact on young buyers purchasing a primary permanent home, on the rental market, and on construction/rehabilitation. Key highlights include the practical update of thresholds linked to IMT benefits, the continuation of measures aimed at younger buyers, stronger incentives for rentals and, in urban planning, a relevant operational shift: greater digitalisation of procedures, with electronic submission and tracking and greater standardisation of documentary requirements.
Buying and selling: what remains and what changes in practice
In 2026, measures supporting young people buying a primary permanent home remain in place. The most “practical” change is that reference values and the effect of benefits may be impacted by the 2026 update to IMT brackets, which influences full or partial exemption thresholds.
In practice, anyone planning to buy should confirm from the outset:
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whether the acquisition qualifies as a primary permanent home;
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whether the buyer’s profile meets the criteria for youth-focused measures;
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the impact of updated brackets and thresholds on the specific situation, before making commitments.
Youth mortgage credit and support instruments
In 2026, support instruments for mortgage credit aimed at younger profiles remain relevant because they reduce initial entry barriers and help make financing feasible on more favourable terms, where applicable.
Even where public support measures exist, the final decision still depends on bank assessment and approval. That is why, beyond looking at “terms,” it is essential to ensure documentary consistency and evidence of the financial profile, to reduce friction in the process.
Rentals: support measures and stronger deductions
In the rental market, relevant support measures and specific rules continue to apply, which may favour continuity in certain age-related scenarios, including the logic of consecutive applications and specific criteria for joint applications by couples.
At the same time, the practical relevance of deductions and benefits linked to rent is increasing, making it even more important to ensure that:
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the contract is formalised and properly documented;
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relevant supporting evidence is organised;
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the rental terms are consistent with the classification you intend to apply.
In 2026, documentary organisation is a decisive factor in turning “existing measures” into effective benefits, without refusals due to lack of proof.
Construction and rehabilitation: incentives and reduced VAT
In 2026, tax measures aimed at lowering costs and stimulating housing supply gain prominence. Among them is the application of a reduced VAT rate to the construction and rehabilitation of properties intended for housing, within objective criteria, including limits linked to sale price and/or rent value.
There are also references to incentives in rentals with moderate rents, linked to comparative criteria with the municipality’s median and to eligibility conditions that require proof.
These measures may be highly relevant for developers, investors and landlords, but they have a critical point: eligibility is defined by concrete conditions and, when in doubt, the lack of a solid file and proper classification can lead to later corrections and costs.
Urban planning in 2026: more digital, more traceable, more demanding
One of the most relevant changes for 2026 is operational: greater digitalisation of urban planning procedures, with electronic platforms and digital submission and tracking flows.
The practical impact tends to be twofold:
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more transparency and traceability, with status tracking, notifications and history;
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greater discipline in documentary preparation, because requirements, formats and validations become more visible and more standardised.
For owners, developers and technical professionals, this reinforces the idea that “submitting” is only half the work: the other half is preparing the process as a coherent dossier, ready for validation.
Practical checklist for 2026: how to reduce friction and risk
Home purchase
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confirm purpose (primary permanent home) and the conditions applicable to the buyer’s profile;
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validate relevant criteria before signing a promissory purchase contract or incurring significant costs;
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prepare financing documentation in advance and ensure consistency of income evidence and supporting proof.
Rentals
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ensure a formal contract and organised receipts/documentation;
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keep coherent evidence for applicable benefits and deductions;
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where “moderate rent” criteria apply, confirm the comparative rule and keep evidence supporting the classification.
Construction and rehabilitation
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confirm housing purpose and requirements for tax benefits;
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validate objective limits relevant to reduced VAT and other incentives;
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prepare a robust dossier supporting the tax and urban-planning classification.
Urban planning procedures
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treat documentation as a single dossier, with version control and consistent annexes;
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prepare submissions for a digital flow (formats, naming, completeness);
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monitor notifications and respond with discipline to avoid delays due to omissions.
Frequently asked questions
Does the youth package for buying a home remain relevant in 2026?
Yes. The orientation to support young people buying a primary permanent home remains, with practical impact depending on classification and applicable thresholds.
Do mortgage support instruments guarantee approval?
No. These instruments may help with terms, but approval still depends on bank assessment and consistent evidence of the financial profile.
Do rent deductions and rental support measures require specific documentation?
Yes. Their practical effectiveness depends on contract formalisation, supporting evidence and compliance with applicable criteria.
When can reduced VAT apply to housing construction and rehabilitation?
A reduced VAT framework is referenced for construction and rehabilitation intended for housing, conditional on objective criteria and limits linked to sale price and/or rent.
What changes with the digitalisation of urban planning procedures?
It increases traceability and standardisation, but requires more documentary rigour and stronger discipline in meeting requirements and formats.
This article is informational and summarises trends and measures referenced for 2026. Practical application depends on the type of property, the parties’ profiles, the contractual and tax framework, and the procedural requirements applicable in each municipality.