The Swedish Housing System
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.
Based on content from Bofrid's Knowledge Bank