• LazyKoala@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    As a German, it’s hard to imagine that the German rental model is an improvement to anything. It’s horrible. Private landlords honestly stuck even more than corporate ones. Lots of people who feel entitled to put whatever restrictions they want on tenants, regardless of the law. Racism/favorism are rampant, people are literally paying for appointments to just look at apartments and also to be favored in the selection process.

    It’s bad.

    • ECB@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      I Moved from Germany to the UK a little over a year ago.

      The UK (at least London) is soooooooo much worse as far as renting goes. I rented a few places in Germany in a couple different cities and every place had some annoyances, but I just wasn’t prepared for what a free-for-all shitshow it is in the UK.

      Literally hundreds of people coming to viewings for a single place. Landlords can basically raise rents whenever they feel like it and force you out. The places are generally absolutely terrible quality with very little incentive to improve things. I had places trying to force 3+ year contracts with no break clause. I’ve never experienced so many colleagues constantly having issues with “the landlord raising rents by 30% and when we refused or tried to negotiate we got forced out”. Then you have to scramble to find a place in a month.

      They price everything based on number of bedrooms rather than size, so landlords are incentivized to subdivide flats into multiple units and minimise space. A 4-bed flat-share with no living room? Fairly standard, even for working professionals.

      Plus, after you pay the extortionate rents the TENANT pays the taxes (council tax).

      I encountered issues in Germany with renting (particularly when I first moved there) but the German situation would be a HUGE improvement for most of the UK

  • neeeeDanke@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Germans typically stay far longer in their rented homes

    Yeah, partially because you can not find anything new at nearly the same price

    , which are cheaper

    For those with old contracts, Berlin for example is at 13€/m^2 for new rentals. With a median household income of 2117€/month that would be a 54 m^2 appt for one household assuming you spent 1/3 of your income on rent.

    (All of that even assuming you can find an appartment at all)

  • mumblerfish@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My experience with a private landlord in germany is not good. We spent months trying to get them to answer on a question on the windows; can we fix the blinders ourselves or do they want us to use some contractor? No answer. Calls, whatsapp, letters, no answer. We contact the tenants union which said that they can sent a proper legal letter they have to reply to, the lawyer at the union also added that we will use a contractor and take it out of the rent. Now we got a letter back, from their lawyer, no answer on what we should do, just a threat that they will sue us if any rent will go missing. We just gave up.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    1 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Millions of German renters belong to tenant organisations, affording them greater influence over landlords, and there have been limits on in-tenancy rent rises.

    The UK recently surpassed Norway to become the European country in which the greatest proportion of households now have to spend more than 40% of their disposable income on mortgage and rent – what economists call “housing overburden”.

    It is a phrase that does not quite do justice to the life-limiting impact of in effect spending close to half your time at work toiling for your landlord, leaving less for leisure, making plans for the future and for retirement.

    And that is before we consider London, where nearly one in three people live in private rented homes, and the best apartments are more expensive a square foot than any city in Europe – including Paris, Rome and Amsterdam, according to the property agent Savills.

    In Lisbon, workers such as Margarida Custódio are living with the consequences of deregulation, a pandemic-era drive to attract “digital nomads” and more holiday rentals.

    And there are signs of a solution to Britain’s rent problem in Austria, where a quarter of homes are social housing, compared with 17% in England and Wales, and 23% in Scotland.


    The original article contains 966 words, the summary contains 204 words. Saved 79%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!