Sweden · Housing

Buy freely.
Rent? Join the queue.

Sweden's housing market is upside-down from a North American view: buying is open to anyone, but a regular rental contract in Stockholm means an average nine-year wait in a municipal queue. Here's how newcomers actually house themselves.

Figures verified 9 July 2026

Renting: the queue system, explained

First-hand (direct) rental contracts — rent-regulated, secure, indefinite — are largely allocated through municipal queues where your position is simply how long you've been registered. Stockholm's queue (Bostadsförmedlingen) had 894,592 people registered at the end of 2025; the average wait for a regular contract in 2025 was 9 years — and 21 years for inner-city Stockholm. Some outer municipalities run under 5 years. Practical translation: the queue is a long-term asset, not a housing plan. Join it the day you get serious about Sweden anyway — it costs little and your future self will thank you.

How newcomers actually rentWhat it isWatch for
Second-hand (sublet)Renting from a tenant or from an owner of a bostadsrätt — the realistic entry pointUsually time-limited (board approval typically 1 year at a time); rent must be "reasonable" by law
New-build rentalsNewly constructed rentals sometimes skip long queuesNotably higher rents than the regulated stock
Corporate/furnishedRelocation and furnished-apartment firmsConvenient, expensive; fine for the first 6–12 months

For calibration: the average rent for a three-room apartment was SEK 9,118/month in 2025 (≈ $960), including heat and water — nationally, per SCB. Stockholm runs well above that, and new sublets price far above regulated rents. Rents rose 4.6% in 2025.

Buying: open to foreigners, structurally different

There are no nationality restrictions on buying Swedish property. What's different is the structure: most apartments are bostadsrätt — you buy a share in a housing co-op with the right to your apartment, pay a monthly fee to the association, and the board approves new members. Houses (villor) are owned outright. The national average apartment price over the last 12 months is SEK 45,500/m²; apartments are up +4.7% and houses +2.9% year-on-year (Svensk Mäklarstatistik, published 8 July 2026 — data quality-assured by SCB).

Buying costs are low by European standards. For a house: 1.5% stamp duty (lagfart) + SEK 825, plus 2% on any new mortgage deeds (pantbrev). Bostadsrätt purchases carry no stamp duty at all. Annual property fee on houses: 0.75% of assessed value, capped at a bit over SEK 10,000/year (2026). The hard part is the mortgage: Swedish banks generally want a personnummer and Swedish income history — cash buyers have a much easier run.
Bidding wars are the norm. Swedish sales run as open bidding, often decided in days, and accepted bids are not binding until contracts are signed — on either side. Budget for the process, not just the price.
In this section

Guides

Coming soon

Bostadsrätt buying, step by step

The association's finances, the board approval, monthly fees, and what the årsredovisning tells you.

Coming soon

The sublet survival guide

Finding legitimate second-hand contracts, reasonable-rent rules, and avoiding scams.

Coming soon

Getting a Swedish mortgage

Loan-to-value caps, amortisation requirements, and the personnummer problem for new arrivals.

Sources

  1. Bostadsförmedlingen i Stockholm — queue statistics (9-year average, 21 years inner city, 894,592 registered, 2025): bostad.stockholm.se (English: how long does it take)
  2. SCB — rents for dwellings 2025 (SEK 9,118 three-room average, +4.6%): scb.se
  3. Svensk Mäklarstatistik — prices, 12-month changes, SEK 45,500/m² average (8 July 2026): maklarstatistik.se
  4. Lantmäteriet — title registration (lagfart) and mortgage deeds (pantbrev): lantmateriet.se
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