Hello and welcome to the Glenveagh full year results 2025 results conference call. Please note this conference is being recorded, and for the duration of the call, your lines will be on listen-only mode. However, you will have the opportunity to ask questions at the end of the call. This can be done by pressing pound key five on your telephone keypad to enter the queue. I will now hand you over to your host, Stephen Garvey, CEO of Glenveagh, to begin today's conference. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everyone, and thank you, Zach. I'm Stephen Garvey, CEO of Glenveagh Properties. I'm joined today by my colleagues, Conor Murtagh, our CFO, and Kate Halliday in Investor Relations. Thank you for joining our full year 2025 results call. This morning, firstly, I'll walk you through our full year strategic and operational highlights, the market, the policy context, and how our strategy is performing in home building, partnerships, land, and innovation. After that, Conor will take you through the financials and capital allocation, and I'll return to the outlook and closing remarks. As always, we leave plenty of time for any of your questions at the end. To begin, let's turn to slide 4 with the headline numbers for the full year.
2025 was another strong year for Glenveagh with record revenue of EUR 926 million, strong completions growth at 2,568 units, which was up 11% year-on-year, and earnings per share ahead of guidance at EUR 0.20, an increase of 18%. We completed our EUR 105 million share buyback program and continued to expand our margins across the business. What gives us real satisfaction is not just the numbers, it's what they reflect. The investments we have made over the past number of years in our land bank, in our manufacturing, in our partnerships, are all coming through in the results now. The strategy we set out is working and the business is performing at a level that we can sustain and further growth opportunities we can build on this. Turning to slide 5.
Before we get into the detail, it's worth taking a moment to frame the opportunity in front of us. Glenveagh is in a strong position. Ireland has a genuine long-run housing shortage, and we've built a platform that is designed to address this at scale. Our land bank, our manufacturing capability, our partnership relationships, these give us a structural competitive advantage that isn't easily replicated. We're not just benefiting from favorable conditions, we're actively shaping how homes get built in this country. Glenveagh is uniquely positioned to deliver on the compelling market opportunity in front of us with a sector-leading platform and a track record of delivering strong outcomes, reliable cash generation, effective capital management, balance sheet strength, all focused on delivering long-term value creation and returns for our shareholders. Slide 6 sets out the underlying fundamentals, and the picture remains a positive one.
All of the drivers remain for the demand of new homes, such as population growth, employment levels, and wage growth and wage growth continues to strengthen. Ireland's population is growing faster than anywhere else in Europe, and the employment is at an all-time high. That's the environment we're operating in. Notwithstanding potential global economic risks, it underpins the confidence we have in the business at this very moment. At the same time, national completions, while at the highest level in over a decade, remain well below what is needed each year to meet demand. The structural shortfall is real, but government policy changes have set out a clear roadmap to meet the required demand. Moving to slide 7. The policy backdrop has continued to improve and is now meaningfully supportive of housing delivery, with government targeting over 300,000 new homes by the end of this decade.
The National Development Plan, which provides long-term infrastructure visibility of over EUR 275 billion. This is Ireland's largest ever capital program, which will sustain investment, infrastructure investment through to the year 2040. Help to Buy has been extended. VAT on apartments has been reduced from 13.5% to 9%. Planning reform is beginning to deliver greater certainty. These are real, practical changes that make it easier to build homes in Ireland today. We welcome all of this. There is more to do on zoning, infrastructure, and enabling capacity, but the direction of travel is clearly right, and we continue to engage closely with government and state agency to help turn policy intent into homes on the ground.
The large government presence at MIPIM this week reaffirmed its commitment to attracting new institutional and capital investment into the sector to deliver much-needed homes in Ireland. On slide 8, I want to highlight what perhaps is the most important structural asset, our land bank. We've now completed the current phase of our land assembly strategy. The result is a large, fully invested land bank with no further material land investments now required. The vast majority is in the greater Dublin area and focused on own door product, which is the deepest segment and most resilient demand segment in the market. This land bank supports strong delivery capacity all the way through to 2030. It was secured at an attractive cost with embedded spot margins that gives us confidence in the return profile within our portfolio.
We've also completed a meaningful level of land disposals in 2025 and remain well on track to deliver the stated sales across 2026. In a market where deliverable zoned land is constrained, we have assembled probably the best land bank in the country today. Turning to slide 9. Planning is one of the areas where our in-house capability gives us a real edge. Our planning approval rate over the last five years is well above the national average, with only one refusal across a large number of applications, demonstrating our strong relationships with local authorities and the planning and product quality of what we deliver. All 2026 deliveries have already commenced, and the 2027 program is either planned or progressing through active planning applications. The recent planning reforms, the most significant in a generation, are improving timelines, removing delay mechanisms and increasing certainty for applicants.
These changes are good for the sector, good for buyers, and practically good for well-resourced operations like Glenveagh. Let's now move to the home building on slide 10. This was another strong year for the segment. We delivered just shy of 1,500 units, with margins expanding and the forward order book materially ahead of where it was this time last year, now standing at over 1,250 units. The pace of sales was strong across the year, with multiple phases selling out quickly, including Hereford Park, Kilmartin Grove, Rath Rua, Gravel Park and Evernock. The performance reflects the choices we've made in standardization, scalable sites and vertical integration. These aren't just teams. They're showing up in our results today.
With a strong order book and 4 new launches in Q1 and more planned across existing developments, the pipeline is well-positioned going into the year ahead. Turning to partnerships on slide eleven, this was another strong year for this segment, which is now operating at a scale and maturity that really sets Glenveagh apart. Revenue was up significantly year-on-year at 60%. Margins were ahead of target at 18.2%. We continue to build the pipeline, closing out the year strongly with a new mandate for 350 units secured in H2 2025 and in advanced discussions across three further opportunities totaling approximately 500 units. Construction also advanced well at Ballymastone and Oscar Traynor Road while we closed the transaction at Marina Depot with the Land Development Agency in Cork.
Glenveagh is firmly established as the state's partner of choice for large-scale affordable delivery, and that's a position built on consistent, reliable execution over a number of years. It's a hard-won reputation and one we are very proud of. On slide twelve, we give you more detail on the partnership pipeline, which continues to deepen. The pipeline now stands at approximately 8,000 units with a total estimated net development value of about EUR 3 billion. It's substantial and well-balanced across commence timing, contract status and land source, giving us strong visibility on future delivery. We don't need to convert the full pipeline to deliver our targets, and this gives us an ability to be selective and to progress schemes where our platform and scale add the greatest value for both the authorities and Glenveagh. Moving now to slide fourteen and our home of the future section.
There are six principles that guide our innovation program, and it's worth spending a moment on these because they explain why investing in the area and what we expect to get. The first principle is time. We are targeting a significant shift, evolving less on-site labor and maximizing efficiency, which will bring homes to customers faster and allow us to return to cycle our capital quicker through the business as we move through each phase. The second principle is quality. Over 95% customer satisfaction score reflects the higher standards and the more controlled manufacturing approach can support. Greater precision and less variability give customers more confidence in the product and in the quality and what we deliver. The third and fourth principles are labor and value.
Moving more actively into off-site manufacturing reduces the reliance on skilled trades on-site and creates a more resilient, scalable delivery model that in turn supports value by improving delivery certainty and strengthening the proposition for our customers and our partners. The fifth and sixth principles are standardization and infrastructure resilience. Standardization helps simplify the delivery and support scale, while infrastructure resilience is about reducing reliance on public infrastructure and increasing energy independence together. Together, they give us greater control over program delivery and strengthen the long-term resilience of our model. Moving to slide 15, where we present the challenge and how our response. Ireland needs over 50,000 new homes a year. Traditional construction is slow, fragmented and labor-intensive. It cannot get us there. That's the gap that Glenveagh has built its model to close. Our response is vertically integrated housing system.
Glenveagh, combined with Nua, our in-house manufacturing arm, creates a platform that connects standardized design directly to off-site production. Our three factories in Carlow, Arklow and Dundalk have the capacity to produce 2,500 units per year based on one operating shift. The outcome is faster delivery, reduced program risk, guaranteed supply and improved quality. We're aligned with government policy. Our Nua facility in Carlow received ministerial endorsements as a milestone for housing delivery, and we are well positioned to scale this to 4,000 units per year by the year 2030. Slide 16 shows the roadmap for what comes next. Workstream one, timber frame and light gauge steel, is already fully embedded across the platform. That is the foundation for everything else that is built on.
We're now moving through to four further workstreams, each which increases the Pre-Manufactured Value or the PMV. Workstream two is the external wall system. It replaces heavily wet trade-dependent construction with an engineered wall system, taking PMV from our current base to 55%. Workstream three moves to insulated raft foundation system, reducing concrete usage and lowering embodied carbon on site and bringing PMV to 60%. Workstreams four and five, roof cladding and energy water systems, are the final stages, each targeting 70% of PMV. Roof cladding substitutes heavier finishes with modular off-site friendly systems. While energy and water work streams incorporates technologies that reduces peak consumption and reduces the reliance on public infrastructure connections that can delay site starts. We have 400,000 sq ft of manufacturing capacity already in place to support this journey. The direction of travel is clear.
As more and more of the build process moves to offsite, we become more efficient, more predictable and more resilient. Together, it all compounds over time. On slide 17, delivering at scale is only meaningful if you're delivering quality. Our customer satisfaction rating reached a new high in 2025, and repeat mandates from state sector partners tell the same story. Our home buyer portal is now fully integrated across the customer journey, which is a reflection of the care we put into the experience on the other side of the transaction. With that, I'll hand you over to Conor to talk you through the financials.
Thanks, Stephen, and good morning everyone. I'll start with the income statement for 2025 on slide 19. As Stephen outlined, 2025 was another year of strong financial progress for Glenveagh, which delivered continued revenue growth, margin expansion across both operating segments, and EPS ahead of guidance. The quality and sustainability of the earnings profile continued to improve, and the results reflect the compounding benefit of investments and strategic decisions made over the past number of years. In the year, group revenue increased to EUR 926 million, up 7% year-on-year, with home building contributing EUR 545 million from 1,490 closed units, with partnerships delivering EUR 381 million in revenue, representing 60% year-on-year growth as the segment continued to scale.
Gross profit increased to EUR 198 million, with gross margin expanding by 20 basis points to 21.4%, despite changes in business mix. Home building gross margin was 23.6%, up 110 basis points, underpinned by standardization, scale and vertical integration, alongside a continued contribution from land sales. Partnerships gross margin was 18.2%, which included a positive land contribution of approximately 190 basis points. Excluding land, the underlying partnerships margin was approximately 16.3%, ahead of expectations and reflecting continued strong on-site execution. Central costs were EUR 50 million, including a non-cash share-based payment expense of approximately EUR 8 million. Total administration expenses were EUR 54 million, including depreciation and amortization.
While absolute costs rose modestly as we continued to invest in systems, innovation and talent, overheads reduced as a proportion of revenue, evidencing the improving operational leverage as the business scales. This dynamic is expected to persist, with overhead growth expected to lag revenue over the medium term. Net finance costs increased marginally to EUR 19 million, driven by higher average debt balances earlier in the year. Profit before tax was EUR 125 million, up EUR 114 million from 2024. Earnings per share increased to EUR 0.20, up 18% and ahead of guidance, with a return on equity of 14.4%, up from 14.2% in 2024. Turning to the balance sheet on slide 20. The balance sheet reflects a robust and increasingly efficient financial position.
Following the completion of the current phase of our land assembly strategy, the year-end land balance reduced to approximately EUR 534 million, excluding development rights, down from EUR 556 million at the end of 2024, driven by unit delivery and selective land disposals. Our focus remains on steadily reducing capital employed in land over time while maintaining output and protecting delivery certainty. Work in progress remained broadly stable at EUR 284 million, reflecting disciplined production management and capital deployment as output scaled. Contract assets increased during the year to EUR 142 million, consistent with the phasing of revenue recognition across partnership projects. Net assets stood at EUR 793 million at December 31, up from EUR 751 million at year-end 2024, representing continued balance sheet strengthening.
Moving to cash flow on slide 21. Operating cash inflow was EUR 100 million for the year, supported by disciplined management of WIP and land investment, with capital turnover improving as output scales and standardization accelerates delivery. Net debt reduced to approximately EUR 168 million at year-end, down from EUR 179 million at the end of 2024, despite increased production activity and continued capital returns to shareholders. Looking ahead, the unwind of the contract asset through 2026 as milestones are achieved, combined with a growing forward-funded component within partnerships, is expected to strengthen structural cash conversion as that platform scales. On slide 22, we provide a bridge on how the land bank is expected to evolve between 2025 and 2027. Land sales of EUR 55 million were completed in 2025, with a further EUR 45 million targeted for 2026.
This will take total disposals across the two years to approximately EUR 100 million. The year-end 2025 land balance of EUR 554 million, inclusive of development rights, is expected to reduce to a range of approximately EUR 400 million-EUR 460 million by the end of 2027, driven by unit sale WIP releases and land sales balanced by a modest level of selective land acquisitions. This trajectory reflects our deliberate shift from a period of active land assembly to one of progressive capital release, optimizing the portfolio towards larger scalable developments while supporting improving returns and cash conversion over time. Moving to slide 23, our capital allocation priorities remain clear and consistent.
On land, the current phase of our land assembly strategy is now complete, and the land bank supports the delivery of between 2,750 and 3,600 units per annum through to 2030, with no further net land investment required. On WIP, we anticipate continued investment to support the 33% home building unit growth from 2025 to 2027, offset by the ongoing focus on expanding the partnerships platforms in a disciplined and sustainable manner, resulting in an unwind of the contract asset. Furthermore, our grade A office block in Dublin Docklands is expected to deliver a material cash inflow in 2028 following the completion of our lease-up strategy.
On supply chain, off-site investment is largely complete, with EUR 70 million invested to date and the capability in place to deliver 2,500 timber frame and light gauge steel units per annum on a single shift. A further EUR 20 million investment is planned across 2026 and 2027 to expand timber frame capacity and importantly, operationalize our innovative façade production. On returning excess cash, we completed a EUR 105 million share buyback program in December 2025 and commenced a further EUR 25 million program on the 15th of January 2026. On completion of the program, over EUR 445 million will have been returned to shareholders since 2021, reducing the issued share count by approximately 42%.
The group targets an average net debt range of between 15%-25% of gross assets, and we expect to be highly cash generative in H2 2026, providing capacity for continued reinvestment and further capital returns subject to market conditions. Bringing it all together on slide 24. We're confident in our ability to deliver our guidance for 2026, growth in completions across both segments, continued margin delivery, and further progress on land sales. We're guiding to EPS of up to EUR 0.21 for the year, supported by a robust land portfolio, a solid order book, and ongoing standardization. We expect approximately 1,600 home building unit deliveries in 2026, and partnerships is expected to deliver the targeted annual average gross profit of EUR 60 million for that segment.
The business enters the year with a strong order book, fully invested land bank, and clear line of sight on delivery. We'll continue our disciplined and balanced approach to capital allocation, maintaining our focus on value creation and return to shareholders. Thanks again for joining this morning, and I'll pass you back to Stephen for his concluding remarks.
Thank you, Conor, and to wrap things up, please turn to slide 26, where I want to leave you with three things. First, the market opportunity is real and sustained. Structural undersupply, strong employment, rising earnings, and a more active policy environment are all driving demand. That picture isn't going to change materially over the next five years. Second, our platform is built to capture the opportunity at scale. A fully invested land bank, a manufacturing-led delivery system, a scale partnership business, and a track record of disciplined execution. These give us a competitive position that's difficult to replicate. Third, we're delivering. Record completions, record revenue, expanding margins, and significant capital return to shareholders since 2021. The strategy is working. We are confident in our ability to sustain this momentum.
Thank you for taking the time to join us this morning, and I'll pass you over now to Zach for any questions you may have. Thank you.
Thank you very much. Before we get started with the Q&A session, this is a kind reminder that if you would like to ask a question, please press pound key five on your telephone keypad. The first question comes from the line of Colin Sheridan of Davy.
Yeah. Good morning, guys, and thanks for the presentation.
Morning, Colin.
A few from me, if that's okay. The first one's just on land. I'm just wondering if you could comment on, you know, clearly you're not going to be buying as much land over the next couple of years, but how you're seeing the market at the moment. Whether or not actually, given the changes to NPF, there's any strategic land rezoning opportunities in the land bank as it sits today. Second one then, just, you comment on the H1, H2 split in home building in the statement.
Wanted to give us a bit of color on what that looks like at a group level for the full year and what the level of confidence is in H2 delivery at this stage of the year. Then, I guess we'll have to do one on build costs. I mean, how protected do you think you are at this point in time in terms of contracts and, you know, how is vertical integration likely to help out on that side? I guess how much can price be a protection as you go through the year? Notwithstanding that we don't know how things are gonna play out at this stage. Thanks.
Sure, Colin, and good morning. Thanks for the questions. Yeah, I suppose the land buying strategy that we had, obviously we made a major investment in 2024. We clearly signaled that. We took down approximately EUR 280 million worth of land that came in via 2024 and 2025, and some will come in obviously in 2026. I suppose we made the right investment at that moment in time, because from our standpoint, land was going to be constrained because of, I suppose, an underestimated National Planning Framework that estimated the country only needed 33,000 units. The majority of product that we purchased was own door, which suits the strategy and the business between vertical integration and I suppose the deepest segment of the market.
We're not going to be active in the land market for the foreseeable future, probably somewhere into, maybe into 2028 at this stage. I suppose our confidence is that the land portfolio that we've assembled allows us to comfortably support the delivery, as Conor outlined, between 2,750 and 3,600 all the way to 2030. We've plenty of upside there. Our view is the National Planning Framework is going to zone somewhere between 800,000 and 1,000,000 plots of land. Our view is that the capital to sustain that purchase won't be there, so there'll be plenty of opportunity when we go back into the market. Just from a business context, obviously we have a large proportion of our portfolio which is strategic land.
The 19,000+ that we call out excludes strategic land. We're already starting to see some of our strategic land getting zoned in adoptions of local area plans and variations. They will add further to the portfolio as it evolves. You know, we're seeing quite an active land market out there. There's plenty of demand, but a limited supply. That supply will come on. I suppose for us, we're timing our entry into 2028 because we think that's where the biggest opportunity will be. Tied into that will obviously be our own strategic land bank and where that goes. On build cost inflation, look, it's a very volatile market at this very moment. I think we have the tools to navigate this better.
I would describe us as, because we have the vertical integration tied down the way as we have, we can probably sustain a higher element of inflation versus other competitors out there. While we are monitoring and paying close attention to it, we probably have the best tools to navigate. Inevitably there will be more build cost inflation here. That doesn't change our view on where guidance is at this moment in time. We're very comfortable where things are. I think, Conor, you might do on the H1, H2 split.
I think on a bit further on build cost, like we've taken all the actions we can ahead of time. We've good visibility on 2026 costs, over 80% of that as locked in as it can be in the current environment, and then over 50% for 2027. We're not complacent on it. Inevitably, there will be some, but we're well-placed there. When we come back to H1, H2 split, what you're going to see in the first half of the year is an outperformance in partnerships relative to prior year. That's going to be balanced by a reduction in home building completions in H1 versus prior year.
Stephen mentioned the land that we acquired at the end of 2024, that got into production in the early part to middle part of 2025. And that's going to materially deliver from H2 2026. It's not huge in the context of the business. Last year we were mid-30s% in terms of percentage of revenue delivered in H1. It'll be high 20s% in 2026. And then very comfortable. Like, you only have to look at the order book there. You know, it's well underpinned by demand. And now it's about execution, and we've the benefit of having been on site on a lot of those schemes from 2025. You know, notwithstanding the H2 weighting, very confident in it coming through.
Thank you. We will take our next question from the line of Shane Carberry of Goodbody. Please go ahead and unmute your mic.
Morning. Thanks, Stephen and Conor, for the presentation. Three from me, if that's okay. Just one, Stephen, if I could get you to expand on the kind of broader partnerships pipeline, that'd be great. Just kind of the types of opportunities that are within that and you kind of mentioned that you don't necessarily have to execute on all of them. So just a little bit more color around how you're thinking about that kind of beyond the forecast horizon would be helpful. Second, just with regards to planning and just kind of you know, expanding a little bit on kind of slide nine, it looks like you've been very active from a planning perspective and done very well over the last few years.
There was an article in The Irish Times a couple of days ago kind of saying about a couple of delays potentially on a couple of sites. Is that just normal course of business, or should we read anything into that? Just on the back of last question, kind of maybe slide 7 and 8, just kind of trying to think, and I know it's only a small proportion of your portfolio that's kind of above the EUR 450,000 sort of level. Just what kind of demand are you seeing above that sort of level, knowing that the supports are in place? There's quite a lot of support in place below that sort of level.
Yep.
Sure. Yeah, I seen the article myself. I suppose what was a little frustrating about the journalist is he seemed to forget the ones that had all come through the system. We got two judicial reviews that were stuck in the courts for a number of years. Both came through almost 600 units in early January. We got a big development of 450 units in Mooretown, which was granted by Fingal County Council within the eight weeks. The two in question, Balbriggan, the FI is being submitted today. That shows how quick we could respond to that. I think the second one in Belcamp.
Obviously, Belcamp is a much larger development which incorporates Dublin City Council's land bank as well. What I suppose Fingal and DCC wants to do is to bring the DCC lands in as well at this stage. It's going to incorporate the whole thing, which they know is coming down the track. I have no issues on the planning. I suppose we've only seen one scheme fail, and that scheme has now been re-granted by the local authority. Across the board, a really positive planning environment, and I think we show best in class in the quantum that we're now putting through the planning system.
I just think by the end of 2027, as we move into early 2028, the quantum of land that we'll have planning granted on and the runway we'll have in front of us will dramatically change. So I'm really confident on that front. On the partnership pipeline, I suppose we break it into three buckets. Sub EUR 200 million, we probably see a third of that there. Some of that is within our own portfolio, and we're already in discussions with local authorities and approved housing bodies. The other third is somewhere between EUR 200 million and EUR 400 million, and then another quantum above that, larger than that. What we're really seeing confidence in, and you're starting there, I suppose it's all hinged now on the National Development Plan.
We've seen some local authorities already rezone their own land, and we know they're identifying these locations for development. We have a real confidence in what's coming, and I suppose we've a real confidence, and I've been very crystal clear about this, is we're not going after everything. We're going after what works best for Glenveagh in the sense of the product that we can deliver, the more efficiency that we can bring to the table, and obviously the scale of those projects. Very confident, very comfortable where that thing is, and I suppose it really shows where partnerships is now maturing to. I suppose the sustainability of that model going forward is in a really good place. The last one, Shane.
Is on the EUR 400 and above EUR 450,000 then.
Sorry. I suppose, Shane, the only thing I would say, the majority of product and likely to be well into the high nineties is we have very little product above EUR 500,000. There's an element of what we acquired in the Kells portfolio, and that's working its way through the system. They're not as fast as sales, but the conversion rate that we have isn't required. Look, I would say the majority of product that we have is sub EUR 500,000. We're now doing a new launch of product in Dublin at the EUR 400,000 mark. It just shows where we've moved as a business. Very comfortable in the space side.
Yeah. I think part of what you're seeing in that 12%, Shane, is the partnership space. A lot of those are contracted already, so we would have some apartment schemes where you're pushing over that EUR 450,000. As Stephen said, a key attraction of the home building land bank is that it's almost all of it's under that EUR 500,000 cap. Not only under it has significant space below it, which is positive.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jonathan Kearns of Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Morning, Stephen and Conor. In terms of-
Please
NUA, I know it's another timber frame manufacturing business in Ireland recently changed ownership. It'd be interesting to hear just what you think the cost saving is if you're doing this in-house at the moment, versus if you were to buy those timber frames externally. And also beyond cost savings, can you point to the other benefits of having an in-house timber frame facility? Thanks very much.
I might take the first part of that and tee it up for Stephen thereafter. I think the way to think about it, Johnny, is we've put about EUR 70 million into NUA. It's more than covering its cost to capital. It competed for capital versus the home building business and the partnerships business. It still has significant room to sort of grow that further. You're probably going to see that when phases two, three, and four kick in. It's covering its return, its cost to capital at the moment, but it'll materially outperform when we push the additional Pre-Manufactured Value through the facility.
Yeah. No, that's, I think that's 100%. I suppose, Johnny, we made the long-term investment like, you know, NUA for us was a journey that started in 2020, but it only really comes to the fore in 2027, 2028. We've seen an element of that in 2024 and 2025, but it really only starts when the vertical integration of the next phases are all incorporated. I suppose that's where we have the real confidence in controlling build costs because we have to remember that, you know, this government are now investing nearly EUR 20 billion in infrastructure per year. Inevitably, that will tighten the labor market and the availability of labor, but that's where the vertical integration really outperforms for us. Obviously we watch that trade.
Obviously our facility is twice the size of that, and our facilities can expand dramatically over the next number of years. Yeah, we feel from an investment point of view, the returns will really benefit the business really into the future here.
Understood. Thanks very much. Just to follow up, I think you've been very clear that you're not in the land market now for a couple of years. But I just wonder whether when you do go back in, whether you'd be wanting to do things under option and if land options is something that you've been looking at.
Yeah. I'll surmise the land market this way. If you look at the average cost per plot in Glenveagh, you're at 30-odd thousand a plot. As I said, I think somewhere between 800 and 1 million plots of land will become available. That's up to EUR 30 billion in capital. That capital does not exist and will not exist on the ground. I suppose our view is that the land market will really mature, and I suppose for us, it will become closer to the U.K. where you don't have to pay all up front for the land. You can do strategic deals. You know, the cost of capital that's weighed in the sites can reduce, and that's the trajectory we're on.
I think all that's positive upside for where we are at this moment in time. We made the right investment in 2024 to see us all the way to 2030, and now it's just about waiting for the opportunity and striking through. What I have to say is I know there's a lot of media coverage about this that the local authorities aren't moving fast enough. They inevitably never will move fast enough. But it's a bit like an oil tanker. Once you start it turning, it'll keep going. I suppose we've just seen one or two local authorities come out over the last number of days, and you're starting to see big swings. This is all before we put 10-year life cycle plans in place as well. You know, there'll be loads of land.
We'll be the best placed operator to execute it. Our build cost is going to be key to that to produce the unit more efficient than anyone else. I suppose the land cost is going to be irrelevant for us in the business.
Very helpful. Thanks.
All right. Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Edward Prest of Berenberg. Please go ahead and unmute your mic.
Morning, guys. Thank you for the presentation.
Morning.
I've got three, I think. Two. Firstly, in terms of volumes in your home building volume targets of 1,600 and 2,000, so 2026 and 2027. Are you thinking of those as targets to hit or a minimum level that you would achieve? Sort of therefore, how much capacity have you got to beat those? Secondly, in terms of partnerships, you're looking at about, say, FY 2025 is about 41% share of revenue. Is that the kind of level you expect to hold going forward, or are you thinking more in terms of absolute euro value there that you'll maintain? Yeah, that's the two for me. Thank you.
Thank you. Very good morning to you. I think, look, what we're being crystal clear is obviously the portfolio has the capability of doing 27-36. We're giving guidance obviously to the 2,000. No, it's not a target. It's kinda we see that as the floor for what we can do going forward. So pretty comfortable there. I think as the business matures, we'll see how that can expand, but I think we have plenty of capacity and capability to grow into that, and we'll see how things evolve over the next 12 months. We have the land, we have the capability, we have the demand. I suppose for us, it's just about execution and doing it the right way. I don't wanna go through this like an elevator.
I wanna make sure it's the stairs, and we move through each platform, and we can set a stable base and move on to the next phase. Very comfortable in what we can do into the future. On the partnership side, yes, the 40%. I know I've always been of the view that I want to get this business to a 1,700-1,800 unit a year business. What that'll represent, can't give you clear numbers yet in the sense of the scale of that, but, you know, we comfortably believe that this can be a EUR 650 million-EUR 700 million business in the coming years. We certainly think there's a pipeline there to do this. We certainly think we're the best counterparty to do it.
I think we've proven in the partnerships that are now delivering some of the most standout partnerships in Oscar Traynor Road, which you've seen the minister out two weeks ago ribbon-cutting as the first 40 units are now being handed over, and there's real momentum in that site. I think Ballymastone is a standout development, almost 1,400 units. I think the success of that has really shown that this really works. I suppose the engagement with local authorities, it's a proven model. You are a good counterparty, and we'd like to do more with you into the future. I think this can be a very stable business, and there's plenty of opportunity for us into the future.
Yeah. I think in the near term, yourself and Consensus are in a really good shape. There, Ed, at 40%. So certainly for 2026, 2027, you know, 40% is a sensible place to be. Then we can see where we'll update you on the developments and the taking down of that pipeline that Stephen highlighted earlier for the impact in 2028 and beyond.
Okay. Brilliant. Thank you.
There are no more questions, so this is a reminder that if you would like to ask a question or make a follow-up question, you can press pound key five on your telephone keypad.
Well done. Great. Look, thank you, everyone. Oh, sorry.
We have a follow-up question from Shane Carberry.
Hi, Shane.
Sorry, guys. I thought I'd get in right at the end with just one follow-up. I just want to expand a little bit more on the strategic land piece as well would be really helpful. Just how much that could help things going forward as well would be useful to get a bit of a frame in terms of the scale of that and how quickly that could potentially flow through as well when we think about those land bank dynamics that you mentioned earlier.
Yeah. Look, as the business stands, it's 19,000 units of land as it stands before any rezonings happening. We're starting to see rezonings happening. They're not in the numbers yet, but we'll see how they flow through. Variations are to be completed across the board. Realistically, the first variations will be completed by the end of Q2 of this year. I think likely now what's going to happen is there's going to be a second variation by local authorities to speed up process as well, and you're starting to hear the first rumblings of that across local authorities. They've done one, they're gonna do another one. Look, we have quite a substantial quantum of land that can be converted. It is quite substantial. It's not a further euro investment. It's in the land bank. We just wanna see how that plays through. There is a decent quantum there.
I think where you're going to see it, Shane, is in reduced expenditure in land in 2027 and 2028, that near term horizon, and then you're going to see it in unit delivery and margin from 2029 and beyond because, you know, clearly they require it at attractive rates. It's less capital deployment in 2027 and 2028, and then it's margin and unit benefits in the years that follow.
Brilliant. That's really helpful. Thanks, guys.
Thanks, Shane.
Thank you very much. There are no more questions. I will hand it back to speakers for any closing remarks.
Thank you, Zach. Thanks everyone for joining us, and we look forward to catching up with you over the next number of weeks. Thank you very much.