Here is the paradox nobody warns you about before you move to Sweden. To get a personnummer, you need a registered address in Sweden. To rent most apartments in Sweden, landlords want a personnummer. You land at Arlanda with a job contract and a suitcase, and the two systems stare at each other across a bureaucratic canyon that nobody built a bridge over.
- Why the personnummer matters so much in the housing market
- The legal framework: what the landlord needs to have done
- Platforms that work without a personnummer
- Samtrygg — the best option for incoming internationals
- Qasa / Blocket Bostad — Sweden’s largest inventory, with a manual workaround
- Private landlords and the Housing CV
- Co-living spaces: the smartest landing pad
- Serviced apartments: the premium short-term bridge
- The guarantor (borgensman) as a substitute for credit history
- Paying rent without a Swedish bank account
- Avoiding rental fraud
- When the personnummer arrives: what changes
This guide is the bridge. It explains what is actually possible, what documents can replace the personnummer in a landlord’s eyes, which platforms have built manual workarounds, and how to use the first few months of your time in Sweden to move from temporary housing into something stable and long-term.
If you want the full picture of the Swedish housing market — the different types of rental contracts, how ownership works, what a bostadsrätt versus a hyresrätt actually means — start with our post on types of housing in Sweden. This post assumes you already know the basics and focuses specifically on the challenge of renting without a personnummer.
Why the personnummer matters so much in the housing market
The personnummer is not just a tax number. In Sweden it is the key to the entire digital identity infrastructure. Landlords use it to run automated credit checks through agencies like UC or Creditsafe. Housing platforms require it to verify identity through BankID. Municipal housing queues — like Bostadsförmedlingen in Stockholm and Boplats in Gothenburg — require it to even register for a place in line.
Without it, you cannot pass an automated credit check. You cannot activate BankID. And without BankID, you cannot digitally sign a contract on most Swedish platforms. This is not a minor inconvenience. It is a structural wall.
The Swedish rental market divides sharply into two sectors, and understanding which is relevant to you shapes everything. First-hand contracts (förstahandskontrakt) come directly from property owners or municipal housing companies and offer strong tenant protection and regulated rents. They are also distributed through queue systems with average wait times of seven to twelve years in major cities. Without a personnummer to even register, first-hand housing is structurally inaccessible when you arrive.
Second-hand contracts (andrahandskontrakt) — sublets from primary leaseholders or condominium owners — are where the entire housing search for newcomers happens. Competition is fierce, rents are higher, and contracts are fixed-term. But they do not require queue time, and they can be signed now.
There is also a third option: renting a room (inneboende) in a home where the owner or primary tenant continues to live. This requires no external permission from housing boards and is the most accessible option of all, though also the least private.
The legal framework: what the landlord needs to have done
Before you sign anything or transfer a deposit, you need to understand one thing about Swedish subletting law: a landlord cannot legally sublet without permission. This is not a bureaucratic nicety. It is a hard legal requirement under Chapter 12 of the Swedish Land Code (Jordabalken).
If the apartment is a rental apartment (hyresrätt), the primary tenant must have written consent from their institutional landlord, or approval from the Regional Rent Tribunal (Hyresnämnden). If the apartment is a cooperative condominium (bostadsrätt), the owner must have formal approval from the housing association board (bostadsrättsföreningen, or BRF). This approval is granted for a maximum of one year at a time and must be renewed. Many BRF boards are conservative and only approve sublets for clearly defined, temporary reasons: working or studying in another city, a trial period of living together with a partner, or extended medical leave.
Since 2019, Swedish law also criminalizes unauthorized subletting combined with excessive rent. Landlords who sublet without permission and overcharge can face fines or up to two years in prison for serious cases. This makes legitimate landlords cautious — but it also means you have legal protection if you end up in an illegal sublet unknowingly.
The most important safety check before signing anything: ask to see proof that the landlord has BRF board approval (for a bostadsrätt) or landlord consent (for a hyresrätt) to sublet. If they cannot produce this document, the sublet is unauthorized. An unauthorized sublet gives you no security of tenure and puts you at risk of immediate eviction the moment the housing board finds out. You would also have limited legal recourse to recover your deposit.
Platforms that work without a personnummer
Samtrygg — the best option for incoming internationals
Samtrygg was built with international tenants in mind. You can browse listings, create a profile, communicate with landlords, and sign a legally binding contract using only your passport or national ID card — no BankID, no personnummer required. The whole process can be completed before you arrive in Sweden.
Samtrygg manually verifies all listed properties and screens landlords for fraud. Rent payments go through the platform rather than directly to the landlord, which protects both parties. New tenants also receive one month of complimentary home insurance.
The catch: Samtrygg offers deposit-free renting for locally verified tenants who pass an automated credit check. Since you have no Swedish credit history, the automated check will fail. You will be required to pay a security deposit of around two months’ rent alongside the first month upfront. Budget for this. The deposit is held securely by Samtrygg, not released to the landlord until move-out.
Samtrygg also accepts international bank transfers (IBAN), so you do not need a Swedish bank account to pay.
Qasa / Blocket Bostad — Sweden’s largest inventory, with a manual workaround
Qasa powers the housing section of Blocket, which is Sweden’s dominant classifieds portal. It has the largest inventory of second-hand listings in the country. The default user flow requires BankID for contract signing — but there is a workaround that many people do not know about.
You can browse all listings, create a profile, and contact landlords entirely without BankID. The friction only appears when you try to sign a contract. At that point, contact Qasa’s customer support directly. They have a manual signing process designed specifically for internationals: you upload a clear photo of your passport or European driving licence, and Qasa’s team overrides the BankID requirement and generates a valid digital contract.
Like Samtrygg, Qasa holds your security deposit in a separate escrow account for the duration of the lease. Monthly rent is invoiced and handled through the platform. Never pay anything directly to a landlord outside the Qasa system — this is a major red flag.
Private landlords and the Housing CV
If you are contacting private landlords directly — through Facebook groups, Blocket listings outside the Qasa ecosystem, or word of mouth — you need to replace the credit check with something else. The tool for this is what housing specialists call a Housing CV.
A Housing CV is a document package that reconstructs, on paper, exactly what a Swedish credit check would tell a landlord algorithmically. Put together:
A formal employer certificate (arbetsgivarintyg) stating your position, salary, and contract type in Sweden. This is the single most important document.
Pay slips from the past three to six months, either from a previous employer or from your Swedish employer if you have already started.
Bank statements from your home country showing three to six months of consistent income and adequate savings.
Reference letters from previous landlords, ideally translated into English or Swedish with verifiable contact information.
A short personal introduction in English or Swedish explaining who you are, why you are in Sweden, and what kind of tenant you are.
Submit this proactively with every inquiry, before the landlord asks. It signals competence, transparency, and seriousness — which elevates you above applicants who rely only on automated profiles.
Co-living spaces: the smartest landing pad
For many newcomers, the most practical first move is not an apartment at all. Co-living spaces — buildings managed by professional operators that combine private rooms or studios with shared communal areas — have emerged as the cleanest solution to the personnummer paradox for two reasons.
First, they do not require a personnummer or BankID to book. You apply with your passport and, in most cases, proof of employment or enrollment. The operators are experienced with international residents and have straightforward onboarding processes.
Second — and this is the part that makes co-living strategically valuable, not just convenient — they satisfy Skatteverket’s requirements for population registration. You can use a co-living address to apply for your personnummer. The key requirements: your name must be on the mailbox, and you must have a specific unit number to provide on the Skatteverket form. Most professional co-living operators handle this as a matter of course.
Major operators in Sweden include Allihoop (Stockholm, multiple locations including Bromma, Årsta, and Kransen — explicitly markets that no personnummer, BankID, or application fees are required), Colive (Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Lund, with partnerships with specific insurers to help internationals get home insurance without a personnummer), and various smaller niche communities in university cities.
Colive’s insurance partnership is worth noting specifically: one of the standard requirements for a Swedish rental is home insurance (hemförsäkring), which normally requires a personnummer to buy online. Colive partners with insurers who have a manual application process for foreigners — solving a problem that otherwise creates a circular dead-end.
Serviced apartments: the premium short-term bridge
If budget allows, serviced corporate apartments — also known as lägenhetshotell or aparthotels — are the path of least resistance. The market leader is Forenom, which operates across Sweden’s major cities and is explicitly designed for international mobility.
Forenom requires only a passport or home-country ID number to book. They use third-party identity verification systems rather than BankID. The apartment comes fully furnished with electricity, heating, water, and internet included in a single monthly invoice. Check-in is contactless via digital keycode.
The trade-off is cost. Serviced apartments are significantly more expensive per month than a standard sublet. They are best used as a one-to-four month bridge while you wait for your personnummer, after which you can move into a standard rental with your new administrative access.
The guarantor (borgensman) as a substitute for credit history
When a landlord is willing to rent to you but remains nervous about the absence of a Swedish credit history, a guarantor can resolve the impasse. A guarantor is someone who signs a legal addendum to your lease agreeing to cover your rent and any damages if you default.
There are two types of guarantor agreement. A simple guarantee (enkel borgen) requires the landlord to pursue the tenant first before going after the guarantor. A direct guarantee (proprieborgen) — which is what almost all landlords request — allows the landlord to go directly to the guarantor the moment a payment is missed, without exhausting other options first. This is a serious commitment for the guarantor.
Finding a private Swedish citizen willing to sign a direct guarantee for an acquaintance they barely know is unrealistic. But corporate guarantors are a different matter. If your Swedish employer is willing to issue a formal letter guaranteeing your rent — and many larger corporations do this routinely for international hires — it carries enormous weight with private landlords. An established company as guarantor essentially eliminates default risk in the landlord’s calculation.
If your employer offers relocation support, ask explicitly whether they provide rental guarantees or corporate housing arrangements. This conversation is worth having early.
Paying rent without a Swedish bank account
Sweden is near-cashless, and Swish — the dominant mobile payment app — requires both a personnummer and a Swedish bank account. Neither is available to you in the first weeks.
The workaround is IBAN. The bank accounts behind all major Swedish housing platforms (Samtrygg, Qasa, Forenom) are connected to the European banking network. You can pay via international wire transfer using the platform’s IBAN and BIC/SWIFT codes. Wise and Revolut both execute these transfers efficiently and cheaply.
When paying via international transfer, build in extra time. International clearing can take several business days. Swedish late payment penalties (inkasso) are automatic and aggressive — plan your transfers to arrive several days before the due date.
For ongoing utility bills not included in your rent, contact the provider directly and request their IBAN. Most utility companies accept manual monthly transfers from foreign accounts even if they cannot set up automatic direct debit (autogiro) from a foreign bank.
Avoiding rental fraud
The same administrative complexity that makes housing difficult for newcomers makes newcomers attractive targets for fraud. Rental scams (bostadsbedrägeri) are common in the competitive Swedish second-hand market, and foreigners unfamiliar with market norms are disproportionately targeted.
The landlord abroad narrative. The scammer poses as a landlord temporarily out of the country, unable to show the apartment in person, and requests a deposit transfer before sending keys. This is always a scam.
Untraceable payment demands. Legitimate Swedish landlords accept bank transfers to traceable Swedish or European accounts. Any demand for cryptocurrency, Western Union, or MoneyGram transfers should end the conversation immediately.
No documentation. A legitimate landlord in Sweden will share their full name, personnummer, and proof of ownership or right to sublet without hesitation. Swedish society operates on principles of transparency and public access to records. Resistance to sharing basic verification information is a serious red flag.
Black market first-hand contracts. There are people who charge money for introductions to first-hand contracts — which are legally non-transferable. This is a criminal offense in Sweden, and it is also a scam: you pay, receive nothing, and have no legal recourse.
Before signing any private contract outside a verified platform, verify the landlord’s ownership or right to sublet. Swedish address registries (Hitta.se, Eniro.se, Ratsit.se) list the registered residents of virtually every address — a basic check that takes two minutes and can save you thousands of kronor.
When the personnummer arrives: what changes
Once Skatteverket processes your registration and issues your personnummer, the housing landscape changes significantly. You can now open a Swedish bank account and activate BankID — which means you can sign contracts through any platform, pass automated credit checks, register for municipal housing queues (start with Bostadsförmedlingen in Stockholm at bostad.stockholm.se for 200 SEK per year, or Boplats in Gothenburg at boplats.se for free), and buy standard home insurance online.
The wait for municipal first-hand housing is still measured in years, but the day you get your personnummer is the day the clock starts on that queue. Register immediately, even if you are settled in a second-hand contract. Think of the annual registration fee as the cheapest long-term housing investment available to you in Sweden.
For the broader checklist of what to do when your personnummer arrives and what to prioritize in your first three months in Sweden, see our post on moving to Sweden — everything to do in the first 3 months.
And for a comprehensive guide to the personnummer application process itself — what documents to bring, what to expect at the Skatteverket appointment, and how long it typically takes — see our dedicated post on how to get a Swedish personnummer.
If you are currently working through this and have a specific situation — non-EU citizen, arriving with a family, moving without an employer — leave a comment below. This is one of the topics where individual circumstances vary a lot, and a specific question often gets a more useful answer than a general guide can. The LikeSweden newsletter is also the best way to stay updated as platforms and regulations evolve.



