Europe's defense budget is set to grow fast. The real estate money chasing that growth is going to places most headlines miss.
Not London. Not Paris. Not Berlin.
The money is flowing into Munich, Oslo, Bordeaux and other cities that build Europe's tanks, jets and missiles.
The Money Behind The Move
At its June 2025 summit, NATO raised the defense spending target from 2% to 5% of GDP.
LaSalle says hitting that mark means more than €900 billion in extra spending across the group.
That money does not stay in defense deals. It pays workers, builds plants, and lifts demand for homes nearby.
LaSalle rebuilt its Cities Growth Index to track the shift. Defense is now 8% of the score, right next to GDP growth and worker output.
The cities on top of that list are not the ones big investors usually flock to.
Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down where money is rotating. Five minutes a day, with a free investing masterclass when you join.
The Cities Winning
Germany hosts 39% of the top defense metros, per LaSalle. Munich jumped three spots to fourth, while Oslo cracked the top 10 at seventh.
Bordeaux, Lyon, Bristol and the Manchester-Liverpool zone are climbing too. They all share one thing: real factories.
Diehl Defence and Airbus run plants in some of these cities. Air and arms firms pull in workers, contractors and crews. All of them need a place to live.
LaSalle calls the growth "lumpy." Just 3% of city regions will soak up 30% of Europe's GDP growth over the next five years.
If you hold real estate in Europe, that lumpiness matters. The big names are not always the ones moving fastest.
The shift also hits the rental side. New workers in places like Munich are pushing up demand for both rented and owned homes. Local rents are climbing fast.
In Saarbrücken and Nuremberg, city halls are looking at ways to speed up new home builds to keep rents in check.
The Risks Inside The Boom
Fast growth in mid-size cities is not free.
It can strain transit. It can push rents out of reach for many. And it can spark new zoning fights at city hall.
ESG rules add more weight too. New builds now need to clear higher bars on clean energy, transit and local input.
EU rules on aid and trade also slow cross-border deals. So legal work varies a lot by country.
Some markets may also miss out. LaSalle warns growth could skip cities that lack a defense base or strong logistics ties.
Worth Noting
The EU's "Defence Readiness" plan is trying to speed up permits for new arms plants and housing built nearby.
National rules on defense procurement are loosening too, which should make it easier to build large facilities and the homes around them.
Smart money is already lining up. Slow money will pay more later.
That is the trade. Get in now, or pay more once the bid for these homes goes up.
Join Market Briefs for the daily read on global capital flows. Delivered weekday mornings with a free 45-minute investing course as a bonus.
