If you have spent any time trying to understand housing in Sweden, you have probably come across the word bostadskö — the housing queue. And if you have looked into it for more than five minutes, you have probably experienced a mild existential crisis upon learning that the average wait for a rental apartment in central Stockholm is somewhere between nine and twenty years.
- What the bostadskö actually is
- The main queues by city
- Stockholm: Bostadsförmedlingen
- Gothenburg: Boplats Göteborg (Boplats Väst)
- Malmö and Skåne: Boplats Syd
- Other cities
- HomeQ: the national private queue
- How queue points work in practice
- Can you register before moving to Sweden?
- Private landlords with direct applications: no queue required
- What to actually do about housing while you wait
- The second-hand market and your rights as a tenant
- Avoiding rental scams
- The political context: will anything change?
This guide explains exactly how the system works, what the realistic timelines are by city, how to register even if you don’t yet have a personnummer, and — crucially — what to actually do about housing while you are waiting. Because almost nobody in Sweden gets their first apartment through the queue. They get their first apartment through other means, and then they wait.
If you want to understand the different types of Swedish housing contracts before reading this, I’ve covered that in my post on types of housing in Sweden. And if you’re at the stage of trying to find somewhere to live without a personnummer yet, my post on renting an apartment in Sweden without a personnummer covers the most practical options.
What the bostadskö actually is
Sweden’s regulated rental market operates on the principle that housing should be allocated by time, not money. Instead of bidding for apartments the way you might in an unregulated market, you accumulate queue time — one point per day — and when you’ve accumulated enough points relative to other applicants for a specific apartment, you get offered it.
This system was designed to prevent landlords from renting to the highest bidder and to ensure that low and middle-income renters could access stable housing on equal terms with higher earners. In principle, it is genuinely egalitarian. In practice, in Sweden’s major cities, it has produced waiting lists measured in decades rather than months, because the supply of regulated rental apartments (hyresrätter) has not kept pace with demand.
The queue is not a single national system. It is a collection of regional and private queues, each run separately, with different registration requirements, fees, and rules. You can — and should — register in multiple queues simultaneously from day one.
The main queues by city
Stockholm: Bostadsförmedlingen
Stockholm’s municipal housing agency, Bostadsförmedlingen, is the largest and most competitive queue in Sweden. At the end of 2025, it had 894,592 registered people and an average wait time of approximately nine years — though that average conceals enormous variation by district.
Annual fee: 200 SEK
Points system: 1 point per day from registration date
Minimum age: 18
The variation by neighborhood is dramatic:
| District | Current average wait |
|---|---|
| Vasastan / Kungsholmen (inner city) | 17–20 years |
| Solna / Sundbyberg | 10–12 years |
| Nacka / Hägersten | 9–10 years |
| Farsta / Skärholmen (outer suburbs) | 7–8 years |
| New builds (nyproduktion) across the county | ~6 years |
New build apartments are worth highlighting specifically: they tend to require significantly fewer queue points than older stock in the same area, because they enter the system without an existing waiting list. If you are willing to live in a newly built apartment, your wait can be meaningfully shorter than the headline figures suggest.
In late 2025, Stockholm’s queue tightened its verification requirements, integrating with BankID and Skatteverket to require proof of active residency or a valid permit for high-demand zones.
👉 Register at bostad.stockholm.se
Gothenburg: Boplats Göteborg (Boplats Väst)
Gothenburg’s queue — officially Boplats Väst — covers both municipal and private landlords in the Gothenburg region. It is free for users aged 17 to 21; from age 22 the annual fee is 200 SEK.
Average wait times in Gothenburg range from around 5 years in outer areas to 10 years centrally, with some premium central neighborhoods approaching Stockholm-level timelines. The platform requires identity verification through BankID or Freja eID, which means it can be harder to register before you’ve set up your Swedish digital identity. If you don’t yet have BankID, contact Boplats directly to arrange a manual registration.
Important: Some smaller municipal landlords in the broader Västra Götaland region (such as Mariehus in Mariestad and Uddevallahem) require a full personnummer to register — meaning you cannot accumulate points there before your population registration is complete.
👉 Register at boplats.se
Malmö and Skåne: Boplats Syd
Boplats Syd is by far the most accessible of the major metropolitan queues, covering 32 municipalities across Skåne rather than just one city. The annual fee is 300 SEK, and the average wait time is just 3.1 to 3.2 years — with roughly 30% of apartments going to applicants with less than one year of queue time.
This last figure is the most important: it means that active, daily searching and broad geographic targeting within Skåne can realistically result in an apartment offer within months rather than years. Malmö is significantly more accessible than Stockholm or Gothenburg for newcomers who have the flexibility to consider it.
Boplats Syd also has the most flexible identity requirements: if you don’t have a personnummer yet, you can register using your date of birth in YYYYMMDD format, with a proxy (ombud) for correspondence.
| Malmö area | Average wait |
|---|---|
| Limhamn / coastal areas | 5–9 years |
| Slottsstaden / Davidshall | 4–7 years |
| Sorgenfri / Sofielund | 2–4 years |
👉 Register at boplatssyd.se
Other cities
In smaller Swedish cities, the situation is dramatically better. Luleå (Lulebo) and Karlstad (KBAB) both have free queues with wait times ranging from zero to four years depending on the specific apartment and location. If your work or life situation gives you flexibility about which city to live in, this is worth factoring into your decision.
HomeQ: the national private queue
HomeQ is Sweden’s largest private housing marketplace, aggregating listings from over 1,000 professional private landlords including Balder, Willhem, Stena Fastigheter, and Heimstaden. The basic queue is completely free, and points accumulate at the same rate of one per day.
What makes HomeQ particularly useful for newcomers is its combination of three factors:
Flexible identity verification. You can create an account with just an email address and verify your identity by scanning your foreign passport and completing a biometric facial scan — no BankID or personnummer required. This means you can start accumulating HomeQ points before any Swedish administrative process is complete.
Multiple allocation models. Over 20% of apartments on HomeQ are allocated by lottery or first-come, first-served rather than pure queue time. This gives people with few accumulated points a genuine, immediate chance at an apartment — something the municipal queues simply don’t offer.
Short-term contracts don’t reset points. A korttidskontrakt secured through HomeQ doesn’t erase your accumulated queue time. You can use a short-term offer as a bridge while your longer-term points continue building.
To apply for apartments on HomeQ you need to verify your employment through pay slips or a signed employment contract. A signed contract can be uploaded up to three months before your first day of work.
👉 Register at homeq.se
How queue points work in practice
The mechanics are simple: one point per day from the date of registration. Points are entirely passive — they accumulate whether or not you are actively looking, whether or not you apply for anything. They cannot be transferred to another person, purchased, or accelerated.
Declining an offer costs points in some queues. In Stockholm, declining a suitable offer twice or failing to respond within the required window leads to a three-month account suspension. In Boplats Syd, confirmed interest in an apartment automatically cancels all your other active applications on the platform — so you can only pursue one apartment at a time. Know the specific rules of the queue you’re using before you start applying.
Couples can register as co-applicants. On Boplats Göteborg and most other platforms, romantic partners or cohabitants can link accounts as co-applicants. Landlords can then assess your combined income. Crucially, when an apartment is secured, only the primary applicant’s points reset to zero — the co-applicant retains their accumulated queue time for future use.
Annual renewal is mandatory and non-negotiable. Most queues require either an annual fee payment or a mandatory digital login to prevent “queue squatting.” Missing the renewal window — even by a few weeks — typically results in the permanent and immediate deletion of all your accumulated points. Set a recurring calendar reminder. This is the single most common and most devastating mistake people make in the Swedish housing queue.
Can you register before moving to Sweden?
This depends on the queue.
HomeQ: Yes — you can register from anywhere in the world using a foreign passport and email address.
Bostadsförmedlingen Stockholm: Requires a personnummer or samordningsnummer. If you don’t have one, contact them by phone or email to arrange manual registration, which can begin from your actual arrival date.
Boplats Syd (Malmö/Skåne): Yes — you can register using your date of birth before receiving Swedish identity documents.
Boplats Göteborg: Technically requires BankID or Freja eID for full registration. Contact customer service for a manual workaround if you’re registering from abroad.
The practical advice: register everywhere you can as early as possible, using whatever identity documents you have. Every day of delay is a point permanently lost.
Private landlords with direct applications: no queue required
All the queues described above share one fundamental feature: time is the only currency. But there is a parallel market that works completely differently — private housing companies that rent out apartments through direct applications, with no queue points required at all.
These are typically medium-sized or smaller private property companies (privata fastighetsbolag) operating in smaller cities and towns, or in less competitive urban areas, where demand doesn’t require a queue system. Instead of accumulating points over years, you simply apply for a specific available apartment, provide income documentation, and the landlord assesses your application directly — usually within days.
Victoriahem is one of the better-known examples of this model. They manage rental properties across multiple Swedish cities and towns, including smaller municipalities in regions like Småland, Värmland, and Blekinge. When an apartment becomes available, it is listed directly on their website and anyone can apply — no queue membership, no points, no waiting list. The landlord reviews applications based on income, employment status, and background check (kreditupplysning), and selects a tenant.
This model is how I found my own first apartment in Sweden. When we moved to Markaryd, we applied directly through the landlord’s portal. No queue, no years of waiting — just a straightforward application, the right income documentation, and a decision within a reasonable timeframe. It is worth noting that in our case, my husband had an existing personnummer and BankID, which smoothed the administrative side of the process. But the fundamental point stands: the queue is not the only route.
Other examples of private companies operating with direct application models in various parts of Sweden include Nordhaven, Bonum, Stångåstaden (Linköping), and various local allmännyttiga housing companies in smaller municipalities.
When this model works best: It is most viable in smaller cities and towns where demand is lower — places like Markaryd, Karlskoga, Kristinehamn, Lidköping, or Norrköping’s outer areas, rather than central Stockholm or Gothenburg. If your work situation allows some flexibility about location, or if you are moving to a smaller municipality, it is absolutely worth checking whether local and regional landlords use direct applications rather than a queue. A simple Google search for “[city name] hyreslägenhet lediga” or “[company name] lediga lägenheter” surfaces these listings quickly.
The trade-off is that this market is geographically uneven: in high-demand cities, virtually all regulated rental stock goes through the queue. But in much of Sweden outside the major metropolitan areas, direct applications remain a completely realistic and often fast path to a first-hand contract.
What to actually do about housing while you wait
This is the section that matters most for anyone who has just arrived. The queue is a long-term investment, not an immediate solution. The realistic path to stable housing in Sweden looks like this:
Phase 1 (Months 1–3): Secure temporary accommodation — a serviced apartment, short-term Airbnb, or a furnished room. This gives you a physical address, which you need to register with Skatteverket and start your personnummer process. See my moving to Sweden checklist for the full sequence.
Phase 2 (Months 3–18): Move into a legal second-hand sublet (andrahandskontrakt). This is how the vast majority of newcomers to Swedish cities live while their queue time builds. Platforms like Samtrygg, Qasa, and Blocket Bostad are the main search tools. My post on renting without a personnummer covers how to navigate this market safely and what documents to check.
Phase 3 (Year 2 onwards): With a personnummer, BankID, Swedish credit history, and growing queue time, your options expand significantly. You can apply for apartments through the municipal queues, apply for HomeQ lottery allocations, and consider whether buying a bostadsrätt (cooperative apartment) makes more financial sense than continuing to wait.
The second-hand market and your rights as a tenant
Second-hand rentals divide into two legally distinct categories, and understanding which one you are in matters enormously for your rights.
Hyresrätt sublet (governed by Hyreslagen): If the apartment is a primary rental and the person subletting it to you is themselves a tenant, your rights are strong. The rent cannot legally exceed the primary tenant’s own rent (plus a 10–15% furnished surcharge if applicable). After two years of continuous occupancy, you automatically gain security of tenure (besittningsskydd) — meaning you cannot simply be told to leave. And if you are overcharged, you can claim a retroactive refund of up to two years of excess rent from the Rent Tribunal (Hyresnämnden).
Bostadsrätt sublet (governed by Privatuthyrningslagen): If the owner is subletting their own cooperative apartment to you, your protections are significantly weaker. Rent is calculated on a cost basis (market value yield plus operating costs), and you have no security of tenure — the owner can terminate the contract without giving a specific reason. If you believe the rent is too high, the Rent Tribunal can reduce it going forward, but there are no retroactive refunds under this law.
From July 1, 2026, a new rule allows bostadsrätt owners to sublet their apartments for up to five years without requiring board approval from the cooperative association (BRF) — up from the previous two-year limit. This is expected to increase the supply of longer-term second-hand apartments on the market.
Avoiding rental scams
Sweden’s high housing demand has created fertile ground for fraudsters, particularly targeting newcomers who may not know the norms. The Swedish Police’s guidelines are clear:
Never pay anything before signing a written contract and physically viewing the apartment. Any landlord who requests a deposit transfer before a viewing is almost certainly running a scam.
Verify that the person subletting has permission to do so. Ask to see written authorization from the landlord (for a hyresrätt) or from the BRF board (for a bostadsrätt). Contact the landlord or board directly to confirm — don’t rely on documents provided by the person subletting.
Use traceable payments only. Swish, bank transfer, or Bankgiro. Never cash, never cryptocurrency, never international wire transfer to an unknown recipient.
Check the seller’s registered address. Swedish property registry data is public — services like Ratsit.se allow you to verify that the person claiming to live at an address is actually registered there.
More on avoiding scams and navigating the second-hand market safely in my post on renting in Sweden without a personnummer.
The political context: will anything change?
Sweden’s housing shortage and the queue system are among the most actively debated political topics in the country. The core tension is between rent regulation — which keeps rents low for those with first-hand contracts but severely limits supply — and market liberalization, which might increase supply but risk making rents unaffordable for lower-income households.
The current government has taken steps toward modest reform: the July 2026 change allowing five-year bostadsrätt sublets without BRF approval is one example. But a fundamental restructuring of the rent regulation system (bruksvärdessystemet) remains politically contentious, and there is no near-term consensus on major reform.
For anyone arriving in Sweden now, the most realistic planning assumption is that the queue system will remain broadly as it is for the foreseeable future — which means the strategy of registering early, registering widely, and finding stable bridge housing through the second-hand market remains the right approach.
The housing queue in Sweden is not a problem to be solved quickly. It is a long-term investment that runs in parallel with your actual life. Register today, renew every year without fail, and build your short-term housing stability through the second-hand market while your queue time grows.
If you have questions about a specific queue, a specific city, or your situation as a newcomer — leave a comment below. And if this guide was useful, the LikeSweden newsletter is the best way to stay updated as housing rules continue to evolve.


