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Mortgage (Bolån)

Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority regulations FFFS 2016:16 (amortization requirements)

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What does it mean?

A mortgage (bolån) is a loan secured against the property and the most common form of financing when buying a home in Sweden. Banks require at least a 15% cash down payment and conduct a thorough credit assessment including income, existing debts, living costs, and a stress-test interest rate (typically 6–7%) to ensure you can handle higher rates.

Most Swedish mortgages have variable rates or short fixed-rate periods (3 months to 5 years). Amortization requirements apply — at least 1% per year at loan-to-value ratios below 70% and at least 2% above 70%. Additional amortization is required if the debt-to-income ratio exceeds 4.5 times gross income. You can hold mortgages with multiple banks and should always compare rates and terms.

Key Points

  • Requires at least 15% cash down payment — the rest can be mortgaged
  • Credit assessment based on income, debts, and stress-test interest rate
  • Amortization requirements: 1% at LTV below 70%, 2% above 70%
  • Most borrowers choose variable rates or short fixed periods
  • Always compare rates between banks — differences can be significant

Practical Tip

Start by getting a loan promise from your bank before you start looking for a home — it gives you a clear budget. Always negotiate the rate — banks' listed rates are rarely the best they can offer. Use mortgage calculators to compare banks.

Legal Basis: Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority regulations FFFS 2016:16 (amortization requirements)

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