Apt 6 Gloucester Square, Railway Street
Dublin 1 / Mountjoy
Last Sale Price
Sale History
Overall: +0.8% from €220,000 to €221,788 ( → )
Price History
Price Intelligence
This property has been sold 2 times since 3 May 2017. The price has increased by +0.8% from €220,000 to €221,788.
At €221,788, Apt 6 Gloucester Square last sold 29.7% below the Railway Street street median of €315,500 (based on 40 recorded sales). Compared to Mountjoy overall (median €247,000, 720 sales), Apt 6 Gloucester Square sits 10.2% below the area average.
Repeat-sale properties on Railway Street show a median investment growth rate of +7.2% per year over 9.4 years (2016 to 2025, 4 repeat-sale properties).
What did Apt 6 Gloucester Square last sell for?
Apt 6 Gloucester Square last sold for €221,788 on 15 Nov 2017.
How many times has Apt 6 Gloucester Square been sold?
Apt 6 Gloucester Square has been sold 2 times between 3 May 2017 and 15 Nov 2017. The price increased by 0.8% over that period.
How does Apt 6 Gloucester Square compare to others near Railway Street?
At €221,788, Apt 6 Gloucester Square last sold 29.7% below the Railway Street street median of €315,500 (based on 40 recorded sales).
How does Apt 6 Gloucester Square compare to the rest of Mountjoy?
Compared to Mountjoy (median €247,000, 720 sales), Apt 6 Gloucester Square sits 10.2% below the area average.
What is the investment growth rate on Railway Street?
Using properties on Railway Street with at least two recorded sales, the median annual growth rate is +7.2% per year over 9.4 years (2016 to 2025, 4 repeat-sale properties). How this is calculated.
Growth metrics use repeat-sale properties only. Methodology.
Mountjoy Rental Market
Properties in Mountjoy like this one typically rent for the amounts below, based on tenancies registered with the Residential Tenancies Board.
Based on 13 registered tenancies. Source: RTB Rent Register. Yield estimated from median area rent vs last sale price.
About Mountjoy
Dublin's only true Georgian square — a perfect square, each side exactly 140 metres — gives Mountjoy its architectural distinction. Laid out by Luke Gardiner in 1789, the uniform red-brick terraces with their decorative doorways and sash windows once housed the city's professional elite. Joyce, O'Casey, and Yeats all lived or stayed here at various points. The square has weathered decades of decline and recovery, and its restoration continues with quiet determination.
Housing in Dublin 1
Based on 11,162 BER assessments — see district details