Allow me to explain why I spent the first four years of my time in Switzerland under the belief that I would never buy a home here.
First, let’s take a look at a few of the buying prospects:
1) 4 Bedroom flat, 138m2 / 1500 sq ft, CHF 2,490,000
2) 2 Bedroom flat, 85m2 / 914 sq ft, CHF 1,050,000
3) 1 Bedroom loft flat, 81m2 / 870 sq ft, CHF 970,000
4) 3 bedroom house, 145m2 / 1560 sq ft, CHF 2,250,000
5) 5.5 bedroom house, 200m2 / 2150 sq ft, CHF 5,600,000
Now maybe the pretty pictures above were distracting, or maybe you think we’ve got crazy inflation with CHF*, but I’m hoping you noticed that these digs are all crazy expensive.
*At the time of writing this, $1 = .93 CHF, so all those prices are even more expensive in dollars.
A one bedroom flat can easily cost one million dollars and you can forget about buying a normal house. As I write this, there are only 10 single family houses listed for sale in the city of Zürich. Half of them are 2.5-5 million francs.
If you are lucky enough to find a house or flat available, chances are that you cannot afford it. Why not?
One scary word: Deposit.
The general rule in Switzerland is that you need a 20% deposit on a house in order to get a mortgage. How does that work on on that 1 bedroom flat above?
Holy shite. I don’t know about you, but I don’t have 200k in my pocket, let alone 500k for flat #1 up there or 1.12 million for house #5.
When I figured out HOW much buying in Zürich would cost a couple years ago, I simply wrote it off in “the impossible” list and didn’t think anymore about buying for a long time. I had forgotten then that where there’s a will, there’s a way.
Although over 70% of the population here rents, someone has to be buying houses somehow and it cannot be the billionaires alone, can it?
Hoooooooly crap. Yeah. Wow!
He grew up in Greenville, Florida hearing audio. American Auto-Industry is experiencing fresh difficulties and tough competitiveness: Ya think Bill?
Each of their marketing is aimed at her. http://Anmeld.biz/34711