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The Swedish Rental Market

What does it mean?

The Swedish rental market comprises approximately 1.5 million apartments — roughly one-third of the total housing stock. The market is divided between public housing (municipal companies, approximately 830,000 apartments) and private landlords. Rent levels are determined through collective negotiations based on the utility value principle, meaning rents are not set freely on the market but reflect the apartment's objective characteristics.

The Swedish rental market is unique internationally. The utility value system creates stability and predictability for tenants, but also contributes to low mobility — those with attractive first-hand contracts are reluctant to move. Queue times for first-hand contracts in major cities are extremely long, which drives an extensive subletting market and black market contracts. The Private Rental Act (2012) created a parallel market with freer conditions for individuals renting out their own homes.

Key Points

  • Approximately 1.5 million rental apartments — one-third of the housing stock
  • Divided between public housing (830,000) and private landlords
  • Utility value system provides stability but reduces mobility
  • Extremely long queue times in major cities — 10–20+ years for desirable areas
  • Private Rental Act (2012) created freer conditions for individual landlords

Practical Tip

Use multiple channels in parallel: municipal housing queue, private landlords, new-build queues, and platforms like Bofrid. Be prepared to combine short-term solutions (subletting, private rental) with long-term queuing for a first-hand contract.

Read more about The Swedish Rental Market on Bofrid.se

Based on content from Bofrid's Knowledge Bank

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