Published: 5 Dec 12 15:33 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/44874/20121205/
It may be easier to sublet a flat or home in Sweden next year, but it may also be more expensive, according to a government bill which cleared an important legislative hurdle on Tuesday.
What do you think? Leave your comment below.
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You could start by ousting the politically connected occupying inner city apartments at way below market value. But obviously that will never happen. Politics is involved in everything in Sweden. In fact, many Russian immigrants I've spoken to say that Sweden is more like Soviet Russia than contemporary Russia is.
The result will be that rental flats will in future only become available when the primary tenant dies - otherwise they will keep on subletting and exploiting the unfortunate secondary tenant who gets pays a higher rent and gets sod all rights.
It would hardly be difficult to end subletting, just check who lives there, and make decent primary contracts available.
Hence it's a shame that the most important part didn't pass, you still have to get permission from your bostadsrättsförening in order to rent it out, something you rarely get or only for a very limited amount of time. Which means that you as the tenant pay all the cost involved with owning a bostadsrätt but also that it's not used if you need to spend a few years abroad.
I otherwise think this is a step in the right direction and they can always correct the above point later on.
I have encountered the same situation and even abuse from other tenants in the block because we were non swedes.
racism? concern over property abuse?
strange as hotorget where I was originally was mostly arabic ( see market stalls ), sudanese and back packers. as we were leaving a letter came saying the entire block was in a catastophic state of disrepair and that the block was going to cost a fortune to repair.
in our 3rd apartment now and have seen the same scenario unfold each time. half renovated apartments. short lease. no matter how pristine you thought the apartment was after you scrubbed it from top to bottom ( we were warned about obligatory cleaners having to come in ) the "owners" also found "major damage" and demanded payments. always for parts of the apartments that needed replacing. a good scam. but not so when you have a good foriegn lawyer.
I should probably post the name of the dodgy agent involved.
Most bostadsrättsförening wil give permission for rentals of 1 or possibly 2 years.
The reason for not automatically gving permission is to try and keep blocks occupied by owners - people who have a longterm interest in maintaining the block and taking on the various jobs that are required.
Rentals by an owner or a secondary contract create a new and worse relationship between the association and the the temporary tenant, with little that an association can do to control an antisocial tenant. The last thing you want is to find that your neighbours are a series of stag party drunks just renting for the weekend.
Strange system, in effect, you cannot own an investment property that is a flat in Sweden. Be it whether you're away or living in another BRF in Sweden, since as I've heard since you cannot be a member of 2 BRFs.
Arcane system and really stupid
Another joy of private landlords is that many use every trick in the book to fleece tenants and they are very hard to nail through the courts.
Get rid of illegal secondary contracts, which is actually a different question to buy to rent, and the whole rental landscape will improve. Introduce private landlords and and a lot of people will get badly screwed. In London very high rents have not led to new building - this might lead to lower rents. Housing is too important to be left to the for profit sector.
Here are my tips:
1. Investigate those that have first hand contracts and whether they need them or are just scamming the system by renting them out again and pocketing a bucket load of money.
2. Those that are scamming the system obviously lose their contracts and their apartments are returned into the system to help those that actually need them. This should increase the supply.
3. Give people the right to rent out their 'bostadsrätt' apartment when and how they want. This will also increase supply and return the market to equilibrium.
and lastly by doing the above the market will become more attractive to investment companies and hence more apartments will magically get built much like everywhere else around the world.
Problem solved!
It is a better system than the English leasehold, which gets the worst of all worlds. You pay ground rent to the freeholder and get nothing at all in return, plus maintenance charges which can be a rip-off, unrelated to actual costs. And if the neighbours sublet to troublesome tenants the freeholder is not usually going to enforce the conditions of the lease, which can lead to the run-down of the whole block. One problem is that people buy flats with no intention of living in them but to rent out. They don't give a damn about the neighbours if their tenants are eg noisy. This can make problems for those who have bought their flats to live in. It also causes a shortage of flats for owner-occupation.
Good that the government has not proceeded with this freedom to sublet - there is endless potential for trouble.
We do have a small hitch with renting. From the owners point of view the tenants can, regardless of an existing contract, stay longer and the owner cannot legally evict them without a court order, nor can he cut off their water/electricity/heating, nor can he enter the flat and throw their things out and change the locks. And the courts here take forever, and all the bills are for the owner to pay so to get reimbursed from the tenants a private suite has to be filed.
With that being said, it still makes more sense than this Swedish system. At least to me.