Southeast Asia Real Estate and Economic Growth: H1 2024 vs. H1 2025 (Philippines vs. Competitors)
"Southeast Asia's real estate and economic landscape transformed in 2025! See how the Philippines stacks up against Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Indonesia--from post-election rebounds to industrial surges and emerging investments hotspots."

The first half of 2025 has reshaped Southeast Asia's economic landscape, with Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Indonesia making aggressive moves to attract foreign investment, boost real estate, and outpace regional rivals. This report compares their H1 2024 vs. H1 2025 performance, focusing on; 

  • Real estate trends (residential, office, industrial)
  • Economic growth drivers (FDI, infrastructure, policy shifts)
  • How the Philippines compare

1. Economic Growth: H1 2024 vs. H1 2025

THAILAND 

  • H1 2024: Slow recovery due to political uncertainty post-election (GDP growth: 2.8%).
  • H1 2025: Digital Wallet Stimulus ($14B cash handout) boosted consumer spending (GDP growth: 3.5%).
  • Real Estate Impact: Condo demand rose in Bangkok & Phuket, but oversupply remains in luxury segment (CBRE).

VIETNAM

  • H1 2024: Manufacturing slowdown (exports - 12% YoY) due to global demand drop.
  • H1 2025: Electronics & semi-conductor rebound (Samsung, Intel expansions) pushed GDP to 6.2%.
  • Real Estate Impact: Industrial parks (near Hanoi/Ho Chi Minh) surged, but Hanoi condo glut worsened (Savills).

MALAYSIA 

  • H1 2024: Weak ringgit hurt imports but boosted tourism.
  • H1 2025: New FDI-friendly policies (tax breaks for tech firms) lifted GDP to 4.8%.
  • Real Estate Impact: KL office vacancy rose to 24%, but Penang industrial demand spiked (Knight Frank).

INDONESIA

  • H1 2024: Nickel export ban strained growth (GDP: 4.9%).
  • H1 2025: New capital Nusantara construction accelerated (GDP: 5.3%).
  • Real Estate Impact: Jakarta condo sales dropped 15%, but Bali villas & Industrial East Java boomed (Colliers.).

PHILIPPINES COMPARISON

  • H1 2024: Election jitters slowed luxury real estate.
  • H1 2025: BPO & industrial demand surged post-election (GDP: 5.8%).
  • Advantage: Stronger English-workforce vs. Vietnam/Indonesia.

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2. Real Estate Deep Dive: Key Trends

Office Market

Country H1 2024 Vacancy  H1 2025 Vacancy Trend
Philippines 14.2% 12.5% (BPO recovery) 📈
Vietnam 18% (HCMC) 20% (oversupply) 📉
Malaysia 22% (KL) 24% (weak demand) 📉
Thailand 15% (Bangkok) 13% (tourism rebound) 📈

Takeaway: Philippines & Thailand lead in office recovery; Vietnam/Malaysia struggle.

RESIDENTIAL (Condo vs. Townships)

  • Vietnam: Hanoi/HCMC oversupply (50,000 unsold units).
  • Thailand: Luxury Bangkok condos stagnant, but Phuket/Bali vacation homes up 20%.
  • Malaysia: KL high-rises slow, but Iskandar (Johor) grew due to Singapore spilloever.
  • Philippines: Affordable housing shortage (6.7M gap) vs. luxury condo oversupply. 

Industrial & Logistics

  • Vietnam: #1 in SE Asia for factories (Samsung, LG expansions).
  • Malaysia: Penang tech hubs (Intel, Tesla, suppliers).
  • Philippines: Laguna/Cavite industrial praks rising but lag behind Vietnam.

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3. Who's Winning? Competitive Edge in 2025

Factor Philippines Vietnam Thailand Malaysia Indonesia
Manufacturing 🌕(Growing) 💚 (Leader) 🌕(Auto) 💚(Tech) 🌕(Nickel)
BPO/IT 💚 (#1 ) 🌕 (Rising) 🔴 (Weak) 🔴(Small) 🔴 (Low)
Toursim Real Estate 🔴 🌕(Danang) 💚 (Bangkok /Phuket) 🌕(Langkawi) 💚 (Bali)
Infrastructure  🌕 (NSCR, Bulacan Airport) 💚 (North-South Expressway) 💛 (EEC) 🔴 (Delays) 💚(Nusantara)

💚 = Leading / 🌕 = Moderate / 🔴 = Lagging

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4. key Takeaways: Who's the Best Investment Bet?

  1. Vietnam: Best for manufacturing/industrial.
  2. Philippines: Top for BPO/office demand & REITs. 
  3. Thailand: Leader in tourism real estate.
  4. Indonesia: High-risk, high-reward in new capital Nusantara.
  5. Malaysia: Tech-driven industrial grwoth in Penang.

     Philippines' Advantage:

           > English proficiency (outsourcing edge).

  > Young population (housing demand).

⚠️ Must fix: infrastructure delays, condo oversupply.

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copyright statement 

© 2025 Mariza Lendez. All rights reserved. www.chikicha.com 

This article,  Southeast Asia Real Estate and Economic Growth: H1 2024 vs. H1 2025 (Philippines vs. Competitors), is an original work by Mariza, a Doctor in Business Administration (Candidate). It is protected by copyright and may not be copied, distributed, or reused without permission, except for brief quotes with proper credit.

Disclaimer:
This guide is for informational purposes only. It does not promote or sell any investment. The insights are based on independent research, enhanced by AI tools to gather verified data from trusted sources like the IMF, World Bank, ASEAN reports, and official Philippine government publications.

 citationLendez, Mariza [2025]. "Southeast Asia Real Estate and Economic Growth: H1 2024 vs. H1 2025 (Philippines vs. Competitors) URL] https://chikicha.com/trending-stories/southeast-asia-real-estate-and-economic-growth--h1-2024-vs-h1-2025--philippines-vs-competitors

The content reflects the author's academic lens and ongoing dissertation titled “Designing a Purpose‑Driven Retirement Model Based on the IKIGAI Philosophy.”

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Data Sources: 

  1. CBRE (Thailand, Vietnam) - Office & Residential Reports.
  2. Savills Vietnam - Condo Oversupply Analysis.
  3. Knight Frank Malaysia - Industrial & Office Trends.
  4. Colliers Indonesia - Nusantara Development Update.
  5. JLL Philippines - BPO & Industrial demand.

Cross-Country Comparisons

  • World Bank SE Update: July 2025 Regional Outlook
  • UBS Global Real Estate: 2025 Bubble Index (annual report, next due Sep 2025)
  • ADB Housing Report: 2025 ASEAB Housing Needs

 

thanks to the photo #Galeriyolda @pixabay.

The author is a purpose-driven researcher and advocate for dignified aging. Drawing from peer-reviewed studies, national data, and lived experiences, she offers an unfiltered lens into the realities of retiring in developing countries. Her dissertation, “Designing a Purpose-Driven Retirement Model Based on the IKIGAI Philosophy,” informs her mission: to serve as the eyes and ears of anxious retirees seeking not just a place—but a meaningful way—to live the last phase of life.

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