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 2026First-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 rent | What it is | Watch for |
|---|---|---|
| Second-hand (sublet) | Renting from a tenant or from an owner of a bostadsrätt — the realistic entry point | Usually time-limited (board approval typically 1 year at a time); rent must be "reasonable" by law |
| New-build rentals | Newly constructed rentals sometimes skip long queues | Notably higher rents than the regulated stock |
| Corporate/furnished | Relocation and furnished-apartment firms | Convenient, 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.
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).
The association's finances, the board approval, monthly fees, and what the årsredovisning tells you.
Finding legitimate second-hand contracts, reasonable-rent rules, and avoiding scams.
Loan-to-value caps, amortisation requirements, and the personnummer problem for new arrivals.
Sublet contracts, bidding wars, board approvals — the Swedish market has local rules. Ask us anything, or get matched with a relocation or property specialist we've independently vetted.