33 Clancarthy Road
Dublin 5 / Clontarf / D05DX71
Last Sale Price
* Price is VAT exclusive · Learn more →
(Price paid including ~13.5% VAT = €436,975)
Sale History
Overall: +86.9% from €206,000 to €385,000 ( → )
Price History
Price Intelligence
This property has been sold 2 times since 3 Apr 2014. The price has increased by +86.9% from €206,000 to €385,000. That works out to an annualised return of +8.8% over 7.4 years.
At €385,000, 33 Clancarthy Road last sold 6.4% above the Clancarthy Road street median of €362,000 (based on 14 recorded sales). Compared to Clontarf overall (median €434,200, 1237 sales), 33 Clancarthy Road sits 11.3% below the area average.
Repeat-sale properties on Clancarthy Road show a median investment growth rate of +8.7% per year over 10.9 years (2014 to 2025, 2 repeat-sale properties).
What did 33 Clancarthy Road last sell for?
33 Clancarthy Road last sold for €385,000 on 18 Aug 2021.
How many times has 33 Clancarthy Road been sold?
33 Clancarthy Road has been sold 2 times between 3 Apr 2014 and 18 Aug 2021. The price increased by 86.9% over that period.
How does 33 Clancarthy Road compare to others near Clancarthy Road?
At €385,000, 33 Clancarthy Road last sold 6.4% above the Clancarthy Road street median of €362,000 (based on 14 recorded sales).
How does 33 Clancarthy Road compare to the rest of Clontarf?
Compared to Clontarf (median €434,200, 1,237 sales), 33 Clancarthy Road sits 11.3% below the area average.
What is the investment growth rate on Clancarthy Road?
Using properties on Clancarthy Road with at least two recorded sales, the median annual growth rate is +8.7% per year over 10.9 years (2014 to 2025, 2 repeat-sale properties). How this is calculated.
Growth metrics use repeat-sale properties only. Methodology.
About Clontarf
The Dublin 5 portion of Clontarf extends along the seafront where the Bull Wall meets North Bull Island — a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve that hosts some 40,000 wintering birds on a sandbar that didn't exist before the wall was built in the 1820s. The Battle of Clontarf in 1014, where Brian Boru defeated the Vikings, gives the area its most famous historical chapter, though today it's the promenade walks and proximity to St Anne's Park that define daily life.
Housing in Dublin 5
Based on 12,440 BER assessments — see district details