21/12/2025
Here are key reasons why small-sized condominium units (e.g., studios, micro-units) are often considered poor investments in the Philippines, especially compared to larger units or other property types:
1. Oversupply of Small Units
Philippine developers heavily focus on studios and 1-BR units because they’re easier to sell to first-time buyers.
This creates too many similar units in the same building or area.
When you want to resell or rent, you’re competing with hundreds of identical units, which pushes prices and rents down.
2. Weak Rental Yields
Studio units often have high price per square meter, but rents don’t increase proportionally.
After deducting:
Association dues
Property taxes
Maintenance
Vacancy periods
Net rental income is often very low or even negative.
3. Limited End-User Market
Small units mainly appeal to:
Single renters
Short-term tenants
Families, long-term renters, and owner-occupiers usually prefer larger spaces, reducing resale demand.
4. Poor Capital Appreciation
Price growth for small units is usually driven by marketing hype, not real demand.
Once the building is completed:
Prices often stall or decline
Resale prices may be lower than the developer’s preselling price
Larger units and land-backed properties tend to appreciate better.
5. High Association Dues Relative to Unit Size
Condo dues are charged per square meter, but:
Small units feel the cost more because rent income is already limited
Amenities you may not use still add to monthly expenses, hurting profitability.
6. Short-Term Rental Risks
Many investors rely on Airbnb-style rentals, but:
Building admins may restrict or ban short-term leasing
Local regulations can change
Tourism downturns (pandemics, economic issues) directly hit income
This makes cash flow unstable and risky.
7. Harder to Resell
Most buyers prefer brand-new units, not second-hand ones.
A used studio competes directly with:
Developer promos
Payment plans
Discounts on newer projects
Resale studios often sit on the market for a long time.
8. Financing Risk
Many small-unit buyers stretch their finances just to afford the unit.
If interest rates rise:
Monthly amortizations increase
Owners may be forced to sell at a loss
This adds downward pressure on resale prices.
9. Low Flexibility
Small units are hard to:
Reconfigure
Combine
Repurpose
Larger units or properties with land give more options over time.
10. Better Alternatives Exist
In the Philippines, better-performing investments often include:
Larger condo units in prime locations
Townhouses or house-and-lot properties
Small commercial or mixed-use properties
Pre-owned properties bought below market value
Bottom Line
Small condo units in the Philippines are often:
Easy to buy
Hard to profit from
Weak for long-term wealth building
They may work for short-term use or personal convenience, but as pure investments, they usually underperform.