For years, investors talked about “European real estate” as if it were a collection of disconnected national markets. Understandably, as real estate at a granular level always has been, local. Today, that separation is fading fast. Capital, strategies and talent now move across the continent in a way that makes Europe feel closer to one integrated opportunity set than 27 isolated geographies.
Cross-border investment remains high, and the most active strategies — logistics, living, net lease, data centres, and other operational real estate — are built to be pan-European from day one. Investors increasingly ask less “Which country?” and more “Which sector, which operator, and where in Europe does this opportunity price best?”
On the organisational side, many platforms now run:
- a single European investment committee,
- sector-led teams that operate across multiple jurisdictions,
- unified underwriting frameworks,
- local execution capabilities plugged into a central strategy.
London remains a major command centre, but key talent is expected to think and operate across several European markets simultaneously. Several of our clients are insisting on cross-border experience across at least one European jurisdiction, in addition to the UK.
How this shift is reshaping recruitment
As Europe becomes “one market,” hiring is being reshaped in three major ways:
- Roles are now defined by strategy, not geography
Mandates increasingly look like:
- “Pan-European Living Acquisitions”
- “European Logistics Credit”
- “Operational Real Estate across Western Europe”
Country-specific roles still exist, but the centre of gravity has moved toward sector expertise + European reach. We’re seeing this particularly in the logistics sector at the moment.
- Employers expect cross-border fluency
The most sought-after candidates are those who can:
- underwrite deals across different legal and macro environments,
- switch comfortably between geographies,
- collaborate with local operators,
- navigate multi-country portfolios with confidence.
Language skills, cultural literacy and mobility are becoming true differentiators. Fluency in German and French has always been in demand in London. We have recently had a lot demand for Spanish and Italian speakers.
- Team structures prioritise versatility and coordination
Hiring managers are looking for people who can:
- work within a central IC
- manage local stakeholders
- apply consistent underwriting logic across markets
Generalists with only one-country experience risk being outpaced by talent with pan-European capability.
The bottom line
Europe is not unified on a regulatory level — tax, law and politics still vary — but strategically and operationally, major investors already view it as one scalable market with multiple pricing points. The professionals who will excel are those who combine deep sector expertise with a European mindset.
Caravel helps build exactly these teams: integrated, cross-border, sector-led investment and credit platforms designed for the new shape of European real estate.