Sweden consistently ranks among the best countries in the world to start a business. The administration is efficient, the infrastructure is digital, the legal system is stable, and the market is wealthy. If you have just moved here and you are thinking about starting or growing something, those rankings are encouraging — and they are also slightly misleading.
Because getting a company registered in Sweden is the easy part. Understanding the market, how Swedish consumers actually behave, and where the real opportunities sit for someone arriving from outside — that takes longer to figure out, and very little of it is written down anywhere.
This is what I have observed living in Sweden and working with businesses here. And if you are still at the stage of figuring out the administrative side of setting up a company, the most thorough practical guide I have seen is this one from Pikus Media: How to start a business in Sweden as a foreigner — it covers the full registration process, tax setup, banking options, and legal structure in detail, so I will not repeat that here.
What I want to talk about is what comes after.
Sweden is digital — but not all businesses are
Here is the thing that strikes me every time I see it: Sweden is one of the most connected countries in the world. 93% of the population is online daily. Swedes research everything before they buy. They read reviews, compare options, check websites, look for social proof — and they do this on their phone, often before they have even made first contact with a business.
And yet a significant number of Swedish local businesses — plumbers, electricians, painters, beauty salons, local restaurants, small retailers — either have no website at all or have one that was last updated sometime around 2015.
This is not just my impression. The gap between how digitally active Swedish consumers are and how digitally present many local businesses are is well-documented and genuinely striking for anyone coming from a market where online presence is simply assumed. In sectors like skilled trades (hantverkare), local hospitality, and personal services, it is entirely common to encounter businesses that run entirely on word of mouth, a phone number passed between neighbors, and occasionally a paper flyer.
And the thing is — it works. Sweden has a deep culture of personal recommendations and trust networks. A plumber who has been working in the same neighborhood for fifteen years does not need a Google Business profile to stay busy, because everyone already knows about them through someone who knows someone.
But it is starting to strain.
The gap that is opening up
What I notice — and what I hear from people around me — is that the newer generation of Swedish consumers gets frustrated when they cannot find a business online. They search, they find nothing, and they move on to whoever does show up. Not because the invisible business is worse, but because absence from search results reads, subconsciously, as less legitimate.
There is also the simple practical reality of reaching new customers. A word-of-mouth business can stay stable for a long time, but it has a hard ceiling. Every new customer has to come through a personal connection, and that pool is finite. As soon as someone wants to grow beyond their existing network — or as soon as a neighborhood changes, or a business owner ages — the model becomes fragile.
This is the gap that I find genuinely interesting for foreign founders. Someone who arrives in Sweden understanding digital marketing, SEO, and online presence at a basic level is already ahead of a meaningful share of the local competition in many sectors — not because Swedish businesses are unsophisticated, but because they built their client base before online visibility was the deciding factor, and some have not fully caught up with where their customers now are.
What Swedish consumers actually expect
Understanding what Swedish buyers look for is essential for anyone building something here, whether you are selling to consumers or to other businesses.
Research before purchase is the norm, not the exception. Swedish consumers read reviews, compare prices, and check websites carefully before spending money — particularly on services. A business with no online presence, no reviews, and no clear information about pricing and process creates friction that many Swedish buyers will not bother pushing through. They will simply find someone else.
Trust signals matter enormously — but they need to be earned, not performed. Swedes are notably skeptical of marketing that oversells. Exaggerated claims, aggressive self-promotion, and superlatives tend to produce the opposite effect of what is intended. What builds trust here is clarity, consistency, and genuine social proof — reviews from real people, transparent pricing, and communication that does not try too hard. The cultural concept of lagom — roughly, “just the right amount” — applies to marketing as much as anything else.
Sustainability has to be specific. Two-thirds of Swedish consumers actively try to reduce their consumption, but only 22% are willing to pay a premium for green products. Vague claims about being “eco-friendly” land poorly. What works is concrete, verifiable information: named certifications, specific material sourcing, actual data. Greenwashing is not just ethically problematic in Sweden — it is increasingly illegal, and Swedish consumers are practiced at spotting it.
Payment integrations are not optional. Swish for consumer payments, Klarna for e-commerce, Bankgiro for B2B invoicing — these are the infrastructure Swedish buyers expect. A business that cannot accept Swish for a consumer transaction, or that cannot send a proper invoice with a Bankgiro reference, signals that something is not quite set up correctly. Getting the payment layer right from the start is one of the highest-return practical investments a new business can make.
Legitimacy is signaled through specific markers. F-tax approval (F-skatt) tells Swedish clients and suppliers that your company is properly set up. Without it, clients are legally required to withhold 30% from invoices — which creates immediate friction and concern. A .se domain and Swedish-language content on your website carry similar weight for local credibility. A footer with your registration number (organisationsnummer) and VAT number is a legal requirement and a trust signal simultaneously.
The language question: more complicated than it looks
Sweden ranks among the top countries in the world for English proficiency — roughly 89% of the population is fluent. This can create a false sense that English-only marketing and an English-only website is fine.
It is fine for awareness. Swedes are comfortable consuming English content, reading English articles, watching English videos. But purchasing is a different psychological moment. Research consistently shows that 76% of consumers prefer to buy products with information in their native language, and around 60% of fluent English speakers rarely or never complete a purchase on an English-only site.
The SEO implication is equally significant. When Swedish consumers search for a local service or product, they search in Swedish. An English-only website does not rank for those queries. The practical result is that you have to buy your way into visibility through paid advertising rather than earning it organically — which raises your costs and reduces your margin for as long as the site stays English-only.
The smart approach for most local or B2C businesses is a Swedish-language website from the start, with English available as a secondary option. For B2B businesses targeting international clients, the balance shifts — but even then, Swedish-language landing pages for local search terms are worth the investment. Pikus Media have written specifically about this trade-off in their guide on whether you need a Swedish website or if English is enough — it is worth reading if you are thinking through this decision.
Social media: where the opportunity actually is
Sweden’s social media landscape has some interesting characteristics for anyone planning to market here.
93% of Swedes are online daily and 85% use social media daily, making these platforms genuinely significant for reach. The main platforms by usage are YouTube (dominant), Facebook (broad demographic reach), and Instagram (particularly strong among younger women, who are also the most active content creators on the platform). LinkedIn is the B2B standard.
TikTok and Instagram are significantly underused by local small businesses, particularly in the service sector, in a way that still represents genuine organic opportunity. The algorithm’s willingness to surface content from accounts with small followings means that a local business producing regular, relevant short-form content can achieve reach that would cost considerably more through paid channels.
WhatsApp has grown substantially — from 36% adoption in 2022 to 49% in 2025 — and for certain types of businesses (particularly those dealing with international communities or younger customers), it has become a genuine customer communication channel rather than just a personal messaging app.
One important regulatory note: influencer marketing and sponsored content are strictly regulated in Sweden. Any paid collaboration must be disclosed immediately and prominently using clear Swedish terminology — “Reklam” or “Annons” — not the more ambiguous English equivalents. This is enforced actively by the Swedish Consumer Agency and the advertising ombudsman.
The seasonal reality of the Swedish market
One practical thing that catches foreign founders off guard: July is almost entirely a dead month for B2B business in Sweden. Swedish employment law guarantees a minimum of four consecutive weeks of summer holiday, and the culture actively reinforces that July is when you take them. Decision-making stalls, contracts do not get signed, meetings get pushed to August. Planning your B2B sales cycle around this is not optional — it is just the rhythm of the market.
For consumer businesses, summer has the opposite dynamic — outdoor dining, tourism, summer events, and the general increase in social activity that follows the long dark winter creates real seasonal peaks. The key commercial periods for retail and consumer businesses are pre-Christmas, January sales, and — more recently — Black Friday, which Sweden adopted enthusiastically and which now drives significant e-commerce volume.
Where the opportunity actually sits
What I find genuinely interesting about the Swedish market for foreign founders with marketing experience is that the opportunity is often sitting in plain sight.
The structural advantage is not technology, capital, or connections — most foreign founders arrive without local networks and without the credit history that Swedish banks prefer. The advantage is digital literacy and willingness to invest in online presence in sectors where local competition has not yet made that investment.
A local service business with a well-designed website, genuine Google reviews, a consistent Instagram presence, and a properly integrated Swish payment setup is already differentiating from a meaningful share of its competitors in many Swedish cities — not because it is exceptional, but because the baseline is lower than you might expect from a country with Sweden’s level of connectivity.
This is a gap that tends to close over time as more businesses catch up. But right now, in many local service categories, being properly findable online and having a professional digital presence is still a genuine competitive differentiator — and that is a relatively rare market condition.
If you are at the stage of working out how to structure and register your company here, the most detailed guide I have come across for foreign founders is Pikus Media’s practical guide to starting a business in Sweden as a foreigner. For the marketing and website side of things once you are set up — that is exactly what they do, and it is worth a conversation if you are thinking about building something here.
If you have questions about the market, or if you have already gone through the process of starting a business in Sweden and have observations to share, leave a comment below — I would genuinely like to hear what you have found.


