Access the world's leading financial data and tools
Subscribe for $2 Poland Building Permits
Price
The current value of the Building Permits in Poland is 24,986 Units. The Building Permits in Poland increased to 24,986 Units on 4/1/2024, after it was 17,559 Units on 3/1/2024. From 9/1/2002 to 5/1/2024, the average GDP in Poland was 47,682.95 Units. The all-time high was reached on 12/1/2021 with 123,154 Units, while the lowest value was recorded on 1/1/2003 with 2,200 Units.
Building Permits ·
3 years
5 years
10 years
25 Years
Max
Building Permits | |
---|---|
9/1/2002 | 32,400 Units |
10/1/2002 | 37,100 Units |
11/1/2002 | 40,300 Units |
12/1/2002 | 45,700 Units |
1/1/2003 | 2,200 Units |
2/1/2003 | 4,900 Units |
3/1/2003 | 8,800 Units |
4/1/2003 | 13,600 Units |
5/1/2003 | 18,900 Units |
6/1/2003 | 25,200 Units |
7/1/2003 | 32,700 Units |
8/1/2003 | 38,100 Units |
9/1/2003 | 44,700 Units |
10/1/2003 | 51,300 Units |
11/1/2003 | 56,300 Units |
12/1/2003 | 67,600 Units |
1/1/2004 | 3,200 Units |
2/1/2004 | 7,200 Units |
3/1/2004 | 12,700 Units |
4/1/2004 | 19,200 Units |
5/1/2004 | 25,400 Units |
6/1/2004 | 31,600 Units |
7/1/2004 | 38,300 Units |
8/1/2004 | 44,500 Units |
9/1/2004 | 50,000 Units |
10/1/2004 | 54,500 Units |
11/1/2004 | 58,600 Units |
12/1/2004 | 63,100 Units |
1/1/2005 | 3,200 Units |
2/1/2005 | 6,500 Units |
3/1/2005 | 11,300 Units |
4/1/2005 | 17,000 Units |
5/1/2005 | 23,000 Units |
6/1/2005 | 29,800 Units |
7/1/2005 | 36,400 Units |
8/1/2005 | 42,600 Units |
9/1/2005 | 49,100 Units |
10/1/2005 | 54,500 Units |
11/1/2005 | 59,000 Units |
12/1/2005 | 63,700 Units |
1/1/2006 | 3,300 Units |
2/1/2006 | 7,700 Units |
3/1/2006 | 13,700 Units |
4/1/2006 | 20,600 Units |
5/1/2006 | 28,000 Units |
6/1/2006 | 36,400 Units |
7/1/2006 | 43,200 Units |
8/1/2006 | 50,300 Units |
9/1/2006 | 57,800 Units |
10/1/2006 | 64,900 Units |
11/1/2006 | 71,000 Units |
12/1/2006 | 77,000 Units |
1/1/2007 | 5,400 Units |
2/1/2007 | 11,100 Units |
3/1/2007 | 20,200 Units |
4/1/2007 | 30,300 Units |
5/1/2007 | 41,700 Units |
6/1/2007 | 53,200 Units |
7/1/2007 | 64,500 Units |
8/1/2007 | 75,300 Units |
9/1/2007 | 85,300 Units |
10/1/2007 | 94,500 Units |
11/1/2007 | 102,800 Units |
12/1/2007 | 110,500 Units |
1/1/2008 | 6,100 Units |
2/1/2008 | 13,900 Units |
3/1/2008 | 23,300 Units |
4/1/2008 | 35,000 Units |
5/1/2008 | 46,000 Units |
6/1/2008 | 57,200 Units |
7/1/2008 | 69,200 Units |
8/1/2008 | 78,400 Units |
9/1/2008 | 88,600 Units |
10/1/2008 | 98,300 Units |
11/1/2008 | 105,000 Units |
12/1/2008 | 113,200 Units |
1/1/2009 | 6,600 Units |
2/1/2009 | 13,900 Units |
3/1/2009 | 22,600 Units |
4/1/2009 | 31,916 Units |
5/1/2009 | 41,474 Units |
6/1/2009 | 51,538 Units |
7/1/2009 | 62,012 Units |
8/1/2009 | 70,805 Units |
9/1/2009 | 80,020 Units |
10/1/2009 | 88,288 Units |
11/1/2009 | 95,031 Units |
12/1/2009 | 102,947 Units |
1/1/2010 | 5,900 Units |
2/1/2010 | 11,900 Units |
3/1/2010 | 20,600 Units |
4/1/2010 | 29,982 Units |
5/1/2010 | 39,828 Units |
6/1/2010 | 50,132 Units |
7/1/2010 | 59,752 Units |
8/1/2010 | 69,002 Units |
9/1/2010 | 77,937 Units |
10/1/2010 | 85,532 Units |
11/1/2010 | 92,159 Units |
12/1/2010 | 98,934 Units |
1/1/2011 | 5,232 Units |
2/1/2011 | 11,103 Units |
3/1/2011 | 20,377 Units |
4/1/2011 | 29,771 Units |
5/1/2011 | 39,886 Units |
6/1/2011 | 49,746 Units |
7/1/2011 | 59,198 Units |
8/1/2011 | 68,235 Units |
9/1/2011 | 76,720 Units |
10/1/2011 | 83,782 Units |
11/1/2011 | 89,824 Units |
12/1/2011 | 96,398 Units |
1/1/2012 | 5,036 Units |
2/1/2012 | 10,994 Units |
3/1/2012 | 19,167 Units |
4/1/2012 | 28,304 Units |
5/1/2012 | 37,481 Units |
6/1/2012 | 45,715 Units |
7/1/2012 | 54,483 Units |
8/1/2012 | 62,077 Units |
9/1/2012 | 69,303 Units |
10/1/2012 | 76,300 Units |
11/1/2012 | 82,478 Units |
12/1/2012 | 88,056 Units |
1/1/2013 | 4,630 Units |
2/1/2013 | 9,537 Units |
3/1/2013 | 15,867 Units |
4/1/2013 | 22,782 Units |
5/1/2013 | 29,707 Units |
6/1/2013 | 37,201 Units |
7/1/2013 | 45,117 Units |
8/1/2013 | 52,391 Units |
9/1/2013 | 59,650 Units |
10/1/2013 | 66,211 Units |
11/1/2013 | 71,798 Units |
12/1/2013 | 78,056 Units |
1/1/2014 | 4,231 Units |
2/1/2014 | 8,979 Units |
3/1/2014 | 15,279 Units |
4/1/2014 | 22,169 Units |
5/1/2014 | 29,491 Units |
6/1/2014 | 36,792 Units |
7/1/2014 | 44,814 Units |
8/1/2014 | 51,896 Units |
9/1/2014 | 58,937 Units |
10/1/2014 | 65,688 Units |
11/1/2014 | 70,493 Units |
12/1/2014 | 75,917 Units |
1/1/2015 | 4,621 Units |
2/1/2015 | 9,684 Units |
3/1/2015 | 17,614 Units |
4/1/2015 | 25,331 Units |
5/1/2015 | 32,903 Units |
6/1/2015 | 41,522 Units |
7/1/2015 | 51,006 Units |
8/1/2015 | 58,876 Units |
9/1/2015 | 66,933 Units |
10/1/2015 | 74,536 Units |
11/1/2015 | 80,708 Units |
12/1/2015 | 87,577 Units |
1/1/2016 | 5,250 Units |
2/1/2016 | 11,448 Units |
3/1/2016 | 19,212 Units |
4/1/2016 | 27,970 Units |
5/1/2016 | 36,467 Units |
6/1/2016 | 46,610 Units |
7/1/2016 | 55,846 Units |
8/1/2016 | 64,831 Units |
9/1/2016 | 74,227 Units |
10/1/2016 | 82,494 Units |
11/1/2016 | 90,334 Units |
12/1/2016 | 98,571 Units |
1/1/2017 | 6,754 Units |
2/1/2017 | 15,335 Units |
3/1/2017 | 25,414 Units |
4/1/2017 | 34,796 Units |
5/1/2017 | 46,126 Units |
6/1/2017 | 56,555 Units |
7/1/2017 | 67,015 Units |
8/1/2017 | 77,121 Units |
9/1/2017 | 87,184 Units |
10/1/2017 | 97,966 Units |
11/1/2017 | 106,712 Units |
12/1/2017 | 114,905 Units |
1/1/2018 | 6,038 Units |
2/1/2018 | 12,636 Units |
3/1/2018 | 20,683 Units |
4/1/2018 | 28,870 Units |
5/1/2018 | 37,581 Units |
6/1/2018 | 46,503 Units |
7/1/2018 | 55,258 Units |
8/1/2018 | 63,748 Units |
9/1/2018 | 71,228 Units |
10/1/2018 | 79,367 Units |
11/1/2018 | 85,836 Units |
12/1/2018 | 91,485 Units |
1/1/2019 | 6,028 Units |
2/1/2019 | 12,606 Units |
3/1/2019 | 21,143 Units |
4/1/2019 | 30,592 Units |
5/1/2019 | 40,169 Units |
6/1/2019 | 48,668 Units |
7/1/2019 | 58,495 Units |
8/1/2019 | 66,914 Units |
9/1/2019 | 74,852 Units |
10/1/2019 | 83,487 Units |
11/1/2019 | 90,235 Units |
12/1/2019 | 96,777 Units |
1/1/2020 | 6,813 Units |
2/1/2020 | 13,841 Units |
3/1/2020 | 21,948 Units |
4/1/2020 | 28,841 Units |
5/1/2020 | 37,103 Units |
6/1/2020 | 46,948 Units |
7/1/2020 | 57,094 Units |
8/1/2020 | 65,557 Units |
9/1/2020 | 75,042 Units |
10/1/2020 | 84,224 Units |
11/1/2020 | 92,375 Units |
12/1/2020 | 101,591 Units |
1/1/2021 | 8,259 Units |
2/1/2021 | 17,022 Units |
3/1/2021 | 27,230 Units |
4/1/2021 | 37,452 Units |
5/1/2021 | 48,673 Units |
6/1/2021 | 60,386 Units |
7/1/2021 | 72,198 Units |
8/1/2021 | 82,779 Units |
9/1/2021 | 94,351 Units |
10/1/2021 | 105,715 Units |
11/1/2021 | 114,913 Units |
12/1/2021 | 123,154 Units |
1/1/2022 | 6,505 Units |
2/1/2022 | 14,204 Units |
3/1/2022 | 24,423 Units |
4/1/2022 | 33,371 Units |
5/1/2022 | 42,100 Units |
6/1/2022 | 50,593 Units |
7/1/2022 | 58,445 Units |
8/1/2022 | 65,439 Units |
9/1/2022 | 72,325 Units |
10/1/2022 | 78,713 Units |
11/1/2022 | 84,315 Units |
12/1/2022 | 89,530 Units |
1/1/2023 | 4,795 Units |
2/1/2023 | 9,598 Units |
3/1/2023 | 15,649 Units |
4/1/2023 | 21,585 Units |
5/1/2023 | 28,157 Units |
6/1/2023 | 34,835 Units |
7/1/2023 | 41,561 Units |
8/1/2023 | 47,894 Units |
9/1/2023 | 54,316 Units |
10/1/2023 | 60,816 Units |
11/1/2023 | 66,645 Units |
12/1/2023 | 72,460 Units |
1/1/2024 | 5,343 Units |
2/1/2024 | 10,963 Units |
3/1/2024 | 17,559 Units |
4/1/2024 | 24,986 Units |
Building Permits History
Date | Value |
---|---|
4/1/2024 | 24,986 Units |
3/1/2024 | 17,559 Units |
2/1/2024 | 10,963 Units |
1/1/2024 | 5,343 Units |
12/1/2023 | 72,460 Units |
11/1/2023 | 66,645 Units |
10/1/2023 | 60,816 Units |
9/1/2023 | 54,316 Units |
8/1/2023 | 47,894 Units |
7/1/2023 | 41,561 Units |
Similar Macro Indicators to Building Permits
Name | Current | Previous | Frequency |
---|---|---|---|
🇵🇱 Construction Output | -7 % | -4.6 % | Monthly |
🇵🇱 Homeownership Rate | 87.3 % | 87.2 % | Annually |
🇵🇱 Housing Index | 191.72 points | 182.88 points | Quarter |
🇵🇱 Housing Price Index YoY | 13 % | 9.3 % | Quarter |
🇵🇱 Price-Rent Ratio | 122.171 | 117.647 | Quarter |
🇵🇱 Residential property prices | 13.02 % | 9.26 % | Quarter |
Macro pages for other countries in Europe
- 🇦🇱Albania
- 🇦🇹Austria
- 🇧🇾Belarus
- 🇧🇪Belgium
- 🇧🇦Bosnia and Herzegovina
- 🇧🇬Bulgaria
- 🇭🇷Croatia
- 🇨🇾Cyprus
- 🇨🇿Czech Republic
- 🇩🇰Denmark
- 🇪🇪Estonia
- 🇫🇴Faroe Islands
- 🇫🇮Finland
- 🇫🇷France
- 🇩🇪Germany
- 🇬🇷Greece
- 🇭🇺Hungary
- 🇮🇸Island
- 🇮🇪Ireland
- 🇮🇹Italy
- 🇽🇰Kosovo
- 🇱🇻Latvia
- 🇱🇮Liechtenstein
- 🇱🇹Lithuania
- 🇱🇺Luxembourg
- 🇲🇰North Macedonia
- 🇲🇹Malta
- 🇲🇩Moldova
- 🇲🇨Monaco
- 🇲🇪Montenegro
- 🇳🇱Netherlands
- 🇳🇴Norway
- 🇵🇹Portugal
- 🇷🇴Romania
- 🇷🇺Russia
- 🇷🇸Serbia
- 🇸🇰Slovakia
- 🇸🇮Slovenia
- 🇪🇸Spain
- 🇸🇪Sweden
- 🇨🇭Switzerland
- 🇺🇦Ukraine
- 🇬🇧United Kingdom
- 🇦🇩Andorra
What is Building Permits?
Building permits, a critical indicator within the realm of macroeconomics, offer vital insights into the health and trajectory of a nation's construction industry. Our website, Eulerpool, dedicated to presenting comprehensive macroeconomic data, recognizes the fundamental importance of building permits in the broader economic landscape. This article delves into the intricacies of building permits, elucidating their significance, implications, and the manifold factors influencing their issuance and trends. To begin with, building permits represent formal approvals from local government authorities, granting permission for the construction of new buildings or the modification of existing structures. These permits are indispensable for ensuring that construction activities comply with prevailing zoning laws, building codes, and safety regulations. The issuance of building permits is intricately linked with the planning, zoning, and regulatory frameworks established by municipal, regional, and national authorities. From a macroeconomic perspective, building permits serve as a forward-looking indicator, reflecting the anticipated future activities within the construction industry. As a leading indicator, an uptick in building permits often precedes a surge in construction activity, which, in turn, can spur economic growth through increased investments, job creation, and the supply of residential and commercial spaces. Conversely, a downturn in building permits can signal a slowdown in construction, which may have cascading effects on the broader economy. The implications of building permits are multifaceted. In the housing sector, an increase in residential building permits typically suggests heightened confidence among developers and potential homeowners. This confidence may be driven by favorable economic conditions such as low-interest rates, robust employment figures, or government incentives for homeownership. As more residential permits are issued, an increase in housing supply might follow, which could potentially stabilize or reduce housing prices if demand remains constant. Conversely, a decline in residential building permits might signal a cooling housing market, which could be symptomatic of economic uncertainties or rising construction costs. In the commercial sector, building permits are a barometer of business confidence and economic vitality. Issuance of permits for commercial buildings, such as office spaces, retail centers, and industrial facilities, often correlates with corporate expansions and increased economic activity. A surge in commercial building permits can indicate that businesses are optimistic about future economic prospects and are willing to invest in infrastructure to support growth. On the flip side, a decrease in commercial building permits might reflect caution among businesses due to economic headwinds or market saturation. Several factors influence the issuance and trends of building permits, each interwoven with broader economic dynamics. Interest rates play a pivotal role; lower interest rates reduce borrowing costs, making it more attractive for developers and homeowners to undertake construction projects. Consequently, periods of low interest rates often see a rise in building permits. Conversely, higher interest rates can dampen construction activities by increasing financing costs. Government policies and incentives also significantly impact building permit trends. Programs aimed at stimulating the housing market, such as tax breaks, subsidies, or affordable housing initiatives, can lead to an increase in residential building permits. Additionally, regulatory changes, such as revisions to zoning laws or building codes, can either facilitate or hinder the issuance of permits. For instance, streamlined permitting processes and reduced red tape can accelerate permit issuance, while stringent regulations might slow it down. Economic indicators such as GDP growth, employment rates, and consumer confidence are closely linked with building permit trends. Strong economic growth and high employment levels typically boost consumer confidence, leading to increased demand for new homes and commercial spaces. This, in turn, drives the issuance of building permits as developers respond to market demand. Conversely, during economic downturns, reduced consumer and business confidence can lead to a decline in building permits. Demographic trends are another crucial factor. Population growth and urbanization create demand for additional housing and commercial spaces. Regions experiencing high population growth often see a corresponding increase in building permits as the need for new infrastructure rises. Conversely, areas with stagnant or declining populations might experience a slowdown in building permit issuance. Regional and local economic conditions also play a significant role. For instance, areas experiencing economic booms due to factors such as technological hubs, resource discoveries, or major investments often see a surge in building permits. Conversely, regions facing economic challenges, such as industry decline or natural disasters, might witness a downturn in permit issuance. Building permits data, therefore, provides valuable predictive insights for investors, policy-makers, and analysts. Investors closely monitor building permits to gauge the health of the construction sector and identify potential investment opportunities. An increase in building permits might signal a burgeoning market for construction materials, real estate, and associated industries. Policy-makers utilize building permit data to inform decisions on housing policies, urban planning, and economic stimulus measures. Analysts interpret building permit trends to forecast economic conditions and advise stakeholders accordingly. Eulerpool’s commitment to delivering accurate and comprehensive macroeconomic data underscores our focus on building permits as a vital economic indicator. Through meticulous collection and analysis of building permit data, we aim to provide our users with a clear and nuanced understanding of construction trends and their broader economic implications. By staying abreast of building permit trends, stakeholders can make informed decisions and strategize effectively in an ever-evolving economic landscape. In conclusion, building permits hold substantial macroeconomic significance, serving as a gateway to understanding future construction activities and their potential impact on economic growth. The intricate interplay of factors influencing building permit issuance, from interest rates and government policies to demographic trends and regional conditions, underscores the complexity of this vital indicator. As a professional platform for macroeconomic data, Eulerpool is dedicated to shedding light on these complexities, offering our users a valuable resource for navigating the economic landscape with confidence and precision.