lagenhetskelleftea.se
lagenhetskelleftea.se
All terms

Stockholm Housing Market

What does it mean?

Stockholm has Sweden's most pressured housing market. With a county population exceeding 2.4 million and annual growth of 30,000–40,000 residents, demand for housing far exceeds supply. Queue times at Stockholms bostadsförmedling (the municipal housing agency) for an average first-hand apartment in the inner city are 15–20 years, and even in outer suburbs, 5–10 years of queue time are required. Average rent for a two-room apartment in the inner city is 7,000–9,000 SEK/month in older stock, but can exceed 14,000 SEK in new builds.

The market is characterized by extremely low mobility among first-hand tenants, an active subletting market with rents often 50–100% above utility value, and chronic housing shortage that has driven extensive black market trading. Conversion of rental apartments to cooperatives has been particularly extensive in the inner city, where thousands of apartments have disappeared from the rental market. New construction is primarily occurring in development areas like Hagastaden, Norra Djurgårdsstaden, and Barkarbystaden.

Key Points

  • Queue time: 15–20 years in the inner city, 5–10 years in outer suburbs
  • Average rent: 7,000–9,000 SEK/month for a two-room in the inner city (older stock)
  • Approximately 750,000 registered in the housing queue — more than ever
  • Extensive conversion has reduced the rental stock in the inner city
  • New construction in Hagastaden, Norra Djurgårdsstaden, Barkarbystaden

Practical Tip

Register in Stockholm's housing queue as a teenager. Broaden your search to surrounding municipalities like Solna, Sundbyberg, and Nacka, which have shorter queue times. Private landlords and platforms like Bofrid can offer alternatives without queue time.

Read more about Stockholm Housing Market on Bofrid.se

Based on content from Bofrid's Knowledge Bank

Related Terms