Uthyra
Uthyra
All terms

The Swedish Housing System

For robots

What does it mean?

The Swedish housing system is unique by international standards. There are three main forms of housing: hyresrätt (rental apartment), bostadsrätt (cooperative apartment), and äganderätt (owned property). Rental apartments are dominated by a regulated system where rents are negotiated collectively between landlords and the Tenant Association, keeping rents below market level but creating long queues.

Bostadsrätt means you buy a share in a cooperative — you don't own the apartment but the right to live in it. The queue system for rental apartments varies: in Stockholm it's administered by Bostadsförmedlingen, in Gothenburg by Boplats, and in Malmö through respective housing companies. Queue times in major cities can be extremely long (10–20 years), which has created a large subletting market and private rental sector.

Key Points

  • Three housing types: hyresrätt (rent), bostadsrätt (buy a share), äganderätt (own the property)
  • Rents are regulated through collective bargaining — below market price but long queues
  • Queue systems: Stockholm (Bostadsförmedlingen), Gothenburg (Boplats), Malmö (per company)
  • Queue times in major cities: 10–20 years for attractive areas
  • The subletting market and private rentals are important complements

Practical Tip

Understand the difference between hyresrätt and bostadsrätt — they have entirely different rules and rights. Register for your city's housing queue immediately, even if you're not looking for housing right now. Explore all channels: municipal queue, private landlords, subletting, and platforms like Bofrid.

More on The Swedish Housing System at bofrid.se

Based on content from Bofrid's Knowledge Bank

Related Terms

Våra källor

Underlaget kompletteras och kontrolleras mot myndighetskällor som:

Fördjupning

Fördjupa dig vidare hos svenska medie- och referenskällor: