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Housing Bubble

What does it mean?

The debate about a Swedish housing bubble has been ongoing for over a decade. Housing prices in Sweden have more than tripled since the mid-1990s, driven by low interest rates, generous mortgage interest deductions, amortization-free periods, and limited supply. International observers like the IMF, OECD, and EU Commission have repeatedly warned that the Swedish housing market is overvalued.

In late 2022, housing prices fell 15–20% when the Riksbank raised interest rates rapidly, but a full-scale crash did not materialize. Prices stabilized and began rising again during 2023–2024. The debate now centres on whether structural risks remain — high household debt levels (around 200% of disposable income), dependence on variable-rate mortgages, and insufficient supply keeping prices elevated. A potential bubble would primarily affect cooperative housing owners, but the rental market would also be impacted through reduced new construction and increased competition.

Key Points

  • Housing prices have more than tripled since the mid-1990s
  • IMF, OECD, and EU Commission have warned of overvaluation
  • 15–20% price drop during 2022–2023 rate hikes, then stabilization
  • Household debt is around 200% of disposable income
  • Insufficient supply and low interest rates are the main price drivers

Practical Tip

The housing bubble primarily concerns the cooperative market, but indirectly affects the rental market too. During price corrections, construction decreases, which worsens the housing shortage. As a tenant, this means competition for available apartments increases further.

Read more about Housing Bubble on Bofrid.se

Based on content from Bofrid's Knowledge Bank

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