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Housing Shortage

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What does it mean?

Sweden has faced a housing shortage for decades, and the problem has worsened since the 2000s. According to Boverket's (National Board of Housing) housing market survey, a majority of the country's municipalities report a deficit of housing, particularly in the metropolitan regions of Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Malmö. The shortage primarily affects young people, newcomers, single parents, and low-income households who cannot afford new construction or cooperative housing.

The causes are complex: insufficient housing construction during the 1990s and 2000s, population growth driven by immigration and urbanization, a rent regulation system that reduces mobility, and high construction costs combined with lengthy planning processes. The consequences extend beyond the housing market — the shortage hampers the labour market, increases overcrowding, drives illegal contract trading, and contributes to rising homelessness.

Key Points

  • Around 240 of 290 municipalities report housing shortages according to Boverket
  • Greatest shortage in metropolitan regions and university cities
  • Primarily affects young people, newcomers, and low-income households
  • Causes: low construction, population growth, regulation, high building costs
  • Leads to illegal trading, overcrowding, long queue times, and increased homelessness

Practical Tip

Register in the housing queue as early as possible — in Stockholm, wait times can exceed 10 years for desirable areas. Broaden your search geographically and use multiple channels in parallel: housing queue, private landlords, and platforms like Bofrid.

Bofrid's article on Housing Shortage

Based on content from Bofrid's Knowledge Bank

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