14 Brian Terrace
Dublin 3 / Marino / D03P2T0
Last Sale Price
Sale History
Overall: +35.3% from €425,000 to €575,000 ( → )
Price History
Price Intelligence
This property has been sold 2 times since 7 Mar 2018. The price has increased by +35.3% from €425,000 to €575,000. That works out to an annualised return of +6.9% over 4.5 years.
At €575,000, 14 Brian Terrace last sold 59.7% above the Brian Terrace street median of €360,000 (based on 5 recorded sales). Compared to Marino overall (median €409,000, 352 sales), 14 Brian Terrace sits 40.6% above the area average.
What did 14 Brian Terrace last sell for?
14 Brian Terrace last sold for €575,000 on 15 Sep 2022.
How many times has 14 Brian Terrace been sold?
14 Brian Terrace has been sold 2 times between 7 Mar 2018 and 15 Sep 2022. The price increased by 35.3% over that period.
How does 14 Brian Terrace compare to others near Brian Terrace?
At €575,000, 14 Brian Terrace last sold 59.7% above the Brian Terrace street median of €360,000 (based on 5 recorded sales).
How does 14 Brian Terrace compare to the rest of Marino?
Compared to Marino (median €409,000, 352 sales), 14 Brian Terrace sits 40.6% above the area average.
Growth metrics use repeat-sale properties only. Methodology.
About Marino
The Casino at Marino — William Chambers' neoclassical masterpiece from 1759, with sixteen rooms concealed behind what appears to be a single-room temple — is the architectural jewel, but Marino's broader significance lies in its housing estate. Built by Dublin Corporation in the late 1920s as Ireland's first large-scale planned suburb, the garden-city-influenced layout of 1,300 houses set a template for affordable housing in the new Irish state.
Housing in Dublin 3
Based on 11,869 BER assessments — see district details