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?