About iHouse
Irish property — see the history before you commit
iHouse aggregates Ireland's public property records — Property Price Register sales since 2010, listing price history, BER energy ratings, rent levels and gross yields, alongside Small Area demographics, crime statistics, flood and radon exposure. We are not an estate agent and do not host live listings — iHouse is an independent data layer underneath the market, built for the questions Daft and MyHome can't answer.
What's covered
iHouse covers the Republic of Ireland (all 26 counties) — Northern Ireland is not included, as it uses a separate land registry. Aggregated data sources include the Property Price Register, BER energy certificates published by SEAI, CSO Small Area Population Statistics (SAPMAP), OPW national flood-risk maps, the EPA radon exposure map, plus geography and transit data from OpenStreetMap and GTFS Ireland.
What iHouse is not
iHouse does not host live listings, contact agents, accept offers, or charge transaction fees. To view a property in person or list one for sale, use Ireland's main property portals such as Daft.ie and MyHome.ie. You can also browse iHouse's sale and rent listings directly — each one comes with full sale history, neighbourhood context, and risk profile, plus a one-click link to the original listing on Daft.ie or MyHome.ie when you're ready to view or contact the agent.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Where does iHouse get its property data?
iHouse aggregates public Irish records — the Property Price Register (PPR) sold-price ledger from Revenue, BER ratings from SEAI, CSO and Pobal area demographics, OPW flood-risk maps, and publicly available residential listing information — into a single research view, searchable by address or postcode.
Can I see what a house actually sold for?
Yes. Every property page shows the Property Price Register (PPR) entry when one exists — the actual transacted price, not the asking price. Sold-price history goes back to 2010.
What is a BER rating and why does it matter?