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Swedish Housing Policy

What does it mean?

Swedish housing policy has undergone dramatic changes since the early 20th century. During the "People's Home" (folkhemmet) era from the 1930s, the vision was formulated that everyone has the right to good housing. The state took an active role through regulations, subsidies, and public housing companies. The million-programme of the 1960s–70s was the pinnacle of this active policy. During the 1990s crisis, housing subsidies were dismantled, and policy shifted toward market solutions.

Today, housing policy is characterized by the tension between market and regulation. Right-leaning parties generally advocate freer rent setting and simplified building codes, while left-leaning parties want to preserve rent regulation and strengthen public housing. Key issues include solving the housing shortage, the future of rent regulation, renovation tax deductions (ROT), mortgage interest deductions, and how to finance the renovation of million-programme housing without displacing existing tenants.

Key Points

  • The People's Home (1930s): the state guarantees good housing for all
  • Million Programme (1965–1974): state-funded mass construction
  • 1990s crisis: housing subsidies dismantled, market orientation begins
  • Current debate: market rent vs. utility value, building codes vs. housing shortage
  • Interest deductions and renovation deductions (ROT) are central policy tools

Practical Tip

Understand that housing policy directly affects your living costs and options. Follow parliamentary debates on rental legislation and construction subsidies — political decisions can change the rules for tenants within a single election cycle.

Read more about Swedish Housing Policy on Bofrid.se

Based on content from Bofrid's Knowledge Bank

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