Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Basic House Dictionary
After travelling down the slippery slope of property ownership, yet again, I've decided to start jotting down a few things I've learnt about Swedish property along the way. I must admit that, sitting back in New Zealand, it all looked pretty simple on the property websites. But some of the subtle differences have caught me offguard.
There are 3 major types of accomodation you can purchase as a home. The first is a villa, or enfamiljshus. This is your run of the mill, standard house. You buy the house, and the plot of land it sits on. You pay rates to the kommun for roads, rubbish collection, water use, and sometimes for heating use.
The second type is a rådhus, or "row house". It's essentially the same as a villa, but your neighbours' houses join to the two sides of your house. They are also generally smaller than a villa. Again, you generally get a bit of grass. And a fence if you are lucky.
The 3rd type is known as bostadsrätt. This usually applies to apartments (lägenhet), but can also include a villa or rådhus. Bostadsrätt ("right to live") properties are generally much cheaper to purchase, because you're only buying the right to live there, and not the roof, windows, front door, or gardens. You pay a fixed monthly fee to a Body Corporate who maintain the building itself and the land. These fees can vary greatly so you need to add the monthly fee to the purchase price of the apartment, to get a true price comparison. Check on what is included, or excluded, in the monthly fee. A very cheap fee might exlude heating costs. Sometimes it might be cheaper long term to buy a house. If that's your thing.
Sitting outside of this group of properties is the fritidshus. This is a holiday house, or stuga, and there are bucketloads of them scattered around the Swedish countryside. As a rule, you can only live in these properties on a temporary basis. For weekends or holidays. Not full time. I say, as a rule, because, depending on the circumstances, the local kommun may grant permission for a holiday house to be used as a home. If there is infrastructure in place, and it falls in line with the council's zoning plans etc. But it's not a right to do so. This is where Sweden differs from many othe countries. In NZ, a house is a house is a house. I would be perfectly entitled to move myself, my wife, children, my mother in law, and her 3 goats, into my beach front holiday home. And live there forever. Without exception. Not so in Sweden. Many fritidshus are classified as seasonal occupation only. So check that one out thoroughly before investing.
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I think you mean "radhus", rådhus is the city council building :)
ReplyDeleteQuite right. Suitably embarassed.
ReplyDeleteThis was really helpful! I've been so confused by the Swedish system.
ReplyDeleteLooking on sites like bovision.se I've seen bostadsraetter that just say: "KOMMANDE FÖRSÄLJNING" and "Accepterat pris" and only stating the monthly avgift. So not sure how you'd know you can afford it and I'm confused as I don't understand whether you'd need to pay say e.g. 2,995,000 upfront and then the avgift per month or whether there's some sort of financing like a mortgage available?
I'm appealing to your wisdom on the topic!
Not quite sure that I follow your question here. And I apologise for missing your comment before now. Obtaining a mortgage, that's up to you and your bank. The monthly avgift is between you and the Body Corporate, and is nothing to do with the bank. That money needs to be paid to the body corporate every month. The seller should say exactly what is included in the monthly fee, so that you can work out if you need to pay anything extra each month, such as for electricity. A Kommände Försäljning is just a notice that a property is coming up for sale. Often it can be delayed because the seller is waiting on confirmation for the new property they are going to be moving into.
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