The patterns in Western Europe are quite understandable, with popular tourist destinations being expensive for a multitude of reasons. But what is causing housing the extreme figures for Eastern Europe?
To be fair home ownership rates in most of Eastern Europe such as in Poland and Romania is well above 90%, so could this have been skewed by low number of rental properties?
The Estonian numbers are nonsense. Almost look inverted.
Another contender for r/portugalcykablyat
Is this data available as percentages of €1,000?
It’s interesting to see how much the locals pay versus how much they earn, but it’s also kind of messy
TIL Switzerland and Norway are in the EU.
Also, you won’t get a rental contract in Switzerland that’s more than 1/3 of your income, so your 40% numbers are a bit irrelevant
Me with a 40 years mortage in Mallorca aprooves 🥲
That first image around 40% can’t be right for Stockholm. Median yearly income after taxes – 260kSEK. Average yearly rent per m^2 – 1540, so 100m^2 costs 154/260 ~= 59%. Is it counting income before taxes? 154/377 ~= 41%. Yep. That’s pretty useless.
Very cool. I believe that Ireland is still in the EU.
Very nice! Where can i find the oc? I am currently working on a project that’s called ‘sustainable housing for all’… so might want to uses the graphs
Ire-exit must’ve slipped past me in recent years lol
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Holy hell, why its so bad in Poland
Good lord, what is happening in Poland?
The patterns in Western Europe are quite understandable, with popular tourist destinations being expensive for a multitude of reasons. But what is causing housing the extreme figures for Eastern Europe?
To be fair home ownership rates in most of Eastern Europe such as in Poland and Romania is well above 90%, so could this have been skewed by low number of rental properties?
The Estonian numbers are nonsense. Almost look inverted.
Another contender for r/portugalcykablyat
Is this data available as percentages of €1,000?
It’s interesting to see how much the locals pay versus how much they earn, but it’s also kind of messy
TIL Switzerland and Norway are in the EU.
Also, you won’t get a rental contract in Switzerland that’s more than 1/3 of your income, so your 40% numbers are a bit irrelevant
Me with a 40 years mortage in Mallorca aprooves 🥲
That first image around 40% can’t be right for Stockholm. Median yearly income after taxes – 260kSEK. Average yearly rent per m^2 – 1540, so 100m^2 costs 154/260 ~= 59%. Is it counting income before taxes? 154/377 ~= 41%. Yep. That’s pretty useless.
Very cool. I believe that Ireland is still in the EU.
Very nice! Where can i find the oc? I am currently working on a project that’s called ‘sustainable housing for all’… so might want to uses the graphs
Ire-exit must’ve slipped past me in recent years lol
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