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RENTING

Swiss rent prices: How new renters are paying the price of the housing shortage

Switzerland’s housing situation has been dire for a while but, far from improving, it is actually deteriorating and renters are paying the price.

Swiss rent prices: How new renters are paying the price of the housing shortage
Swiss apartments are getting scarce and more expensive. Photo: Pixabay

The rental market in Switzerland is under increasing pressure, and the situation is becoming more dramatic with time, the new real estate report from Raiffeisen Bank indicates.

Even though Switzerland’s population has considerably grown in the recent years — now exceeding the 9-million-mark — which means that demand for housing has increased as well, the supply of available rental units has not kept up with this trend.

In 2022, for instance, only 33,532 apartments were approved for construction. This may sound llike a lot, but according to to the bank’s chief economist Fredy Hasenmaile, this is the worst figure in 20 years.

According to Raiffeisen’s forecast, the number of empty (and therefore available for  rent) apartments will soon fall close to, or even below, the 1-percent mark, for the first time in over 10 years.

Smaller is not better

And residential dwellings that are actually being constructed are often smaller than before: the number of rooms per apartment is falling.

For instance, newly constructed residential buildings in Zurich and Bern consist largely of smaller apartments, which means less living space for families. 

The proportion of newly built flats with more than four rooms fell from 79 to 42 percent between 2002 and 2022.  The number of two- room apartments, on the other hand, rose from 5 to 22 percent.

This trend toward small dwellings further exacerbates the housing shortage, real estate experts say.

Less housing equals higher rents

Housing shortage is reflected  above all in an increase in the rents.

Between April and June of this year, for instance, new rents were 6.4 percent higher than at the same time in 2023, recording the biggest hike in over 30 years.

Raiffeisen’s conclusion: “The asking rents are getting out of control.”

This upward trend affects mostly new tenants, as landlors sometimes raise rents after former tenants leave — a common practice, the ban of which will be one of the subjects of the November 24th referendum.

Why hasn’t housing shortage been resolved yet?

Several factors are at play here.

One is that due to Switzerland’s small size and topography (mountains), land for residential construction is scarce.

Another reason is lack of political action.

According to Hasenmaile, though the federal government has chosen the right approach to spatial planning, the actual implementation by the cantons has been slow — criteria for obtaining building permits are strict, which makes them often difficult to obtain.

READ ALSO: How Switzerland’s urban housing shortage is spreading to the countryside

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RENTING

The parts of Switzerland where you’ll struggle to find somewhere to rent

Finding it hard to secure a place to live in Switzerland? You’re not alone, according to new figures released by the Federal Statistics Office (FSO). Some communities are without a single property for rent a sign of the growing housing crisis in the country.

The parts of Switzerland where you'll struggle to find somewhere to rent

New data released last week by Switzerland’s statistical record keeper has revealed that across Switzerland as of June 1st, the number of vacant properties stood at a record low of 51,974. This leaves the vacancy rate threatening to dip below one percent – indicating a housing shortage.

To no surprise, some of the significant shortages are concentrated within the business and diplomatic capitals of Zurich and Geneva.

However, the study also found that over 200 towns across the country are without a single vacant property, as city workers seek a quieter life in the countryside. 

READ MORE: Is autumn 2024 the right time to buy a property in Switzerland?

Commuter spread

Close to Geneva, the towns of Presinge and Laconnex reported no vacant properties, as commuters travelled roughly 20 kilometres each day into the city to work. 

The same can be said of the communities of Lonay and Vaux-sur-Morges, both within a 20 minute drive of Lausanne city centre. 

Some 35 minutes away from Zurich, Schlatt bei Winterthur also reported no vacant properties. 

Other concentrations of communities without vacant properties could be found in Aargau, and in Graubünden, both of which have concentrations of small and medium level businesses, as well as startups

Overall, over half of Switzerland’s cantons recorded a vacancy rate of less than one percent. 

These included Valois, Vaud, Basel-Stadt, Basel-Land, Glarus, Appenzell Inner Rhodes, Graubünden, Lucerne, Uri and Schwyz. 

At the bottom of the table, the canton of Zug reported a vacancy rate of 0.39 percent, while nearby Obwalden stood at 0.44 percent. 

At the other end of the scale, Jura had the highest vacancy rate of 2.98 percent while Solothurn followed at 2.37 percent.

House hunters will have their best luck looking in the Jura towns of Valbirse (7.99 percent) Romont (7.38 percent) and Mourier (6.73 percent). 

Lack of new builds

Much of the blame for the lack of vacant properties can be attributed to a slow down in the number of new properties built, in contrast to Switzerland’s surging population. 

Over the past decade, Switzerland’s population has almost reached nine million

READ MORE: Why renters in Switzerland still struggle to buy an apartment

Meanwhile, fewer building permit applications are being submitted, due to perceptions of legal hurdles and community objections preventing them being accepted 

As Ursina Kubli, Zurich Cantonal Bank’s Head of Real Estate Research prophetically stated in a 2023 study: “If construction activity is not turned around, we are heading straight for a housing shortage in Switzerland.”

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