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COST OF LIVING

How much will life in Sweden cost you in 2024?

This year, food and electricity prices rose dramatically for Swedish consumers. What does the situation look like when looking ahead to next year?

How much will life in Sweden cost you in 2024?
How much will life in Sweden cost next year? Photo: Henrik Holmberg/TT

Food

The prices of food in the Swedish Consumer Agency’s yearly prognosis vary depending on the age of each person and whether they eat lunch at home on weekdays or not.

For an adult aged between 18-30 who eats three meals a day at home, with two snacks between meals, the agency predicts a monthly food cost of 3,940 kronor, or 3,710 kronor for someone aged 31-60.

Babies aged six months to a year have a monthly food cost of 1,090 kronor, according to the agency’s calculations, rising to 1,220 kronor for a one year old eating all lunches at home. 

A one year old who eats lunch at preschool five days a week is predicted to have a monthly food cost of 910 kronor next year, rising to 1,260 kronor for 2-5 year olds.

A child aged 6-9 who eats five lunches a week at school would have a monthly food cost of 1,850 kronor, rising to 2,320 kronor for a 10-13 year old and 2,800 kronor for a 14-17 year old.

All these categories are based on the Nordic dietary guidelines, which recommend little red meat and high amounts of whole grains, vegetables and fish.

This means that a family of two adults aged over 31 and two children aged 6-9, where the adults take their own lunches to work, can expect a monthly food cost of 11,120 kronor in 2024. That might sound high, but it’s only eight percent higher than the agency’s food costs for 2023, so the real number for some households may be much lower.

Other individual costs

On top of those costs, there are additional individual costs for each age group, giving a total of between 2,000 and 2,860 kronor on top of food costs for things like clothing, leisure activities, a mobile phone (not including the contract) and personal hygiene.

See the table below for a breakdown of these costs.

 

Shared household costs

Finally, there are shared household costs for households ranging from one to seven people. These include consumer goods, home goods, media, electricity, water and drainage, and home insurance, which varies in price depending on whether the household is in a large city, medium-sized city or a smaller town.

Single-person households in a major town can expect to pay 3,670 kronor per month on these expenses, rising to 4,340 kronor for two people or 6,460 kronor for a family of four.

Is this more or less expensive than in 2023?

It’s likely next year that people living in Sweden will still be facing high interest rates and high rents. When looking at the bigger picture, though, it’s not all bad news.

According to the agency’s forecast, Swedish energy bills will be 30 percent lower than this year, meaning we’re unlikely to see electricity prices anywhere near the levels seen at the end of 2022 or in 2023, unless there’s an extremely cold winter or an unforeseen event affects the energy market.

Water and drainage costs for homeowners are expected to rise by around 15 percent next year, which will also indirectly affect owners of apartments in housing associations (BRFs), as this may have a knock-on effect on association fees.

Food prices, which have risen 26 percent over the past two years, are expected to go up by eight percent in 2024.

Finally, prices for shoes and clothing are expected to rise by 30 percent, although the agency says that is due more to the fact that the items included in the “basic wardrobe” used for the calculation have changed, rather than the fact that prices have shot up.

How is this data used?

The Consumer Agency’s figures, which don’t include housing costs, are calculated each year and supplied to government agencies, where they are used by municipalities and the Social Insurance Agency when figuring out the size of benefits, like subsistence allowance.

They’re also used by banks in their kvar att leva på (“left to live off”) calculation, which they look at when deciding whether to approve a mortgage or not.

Essentially, the bank will look at a prospective homeowner’s income, subtract costs of housing (mortgage, interest rates a few points higher than the current rate, in case it rises in the future, and any fee paid to a housing association or running costs for a home), and then see if the amount left over is enough to cover the cost of living according to the Consumer Agency’s figures.

The figures are also useful for anyone living in Sweden or planning to move to Sweden who wants a guideline when setting their own household budget.

Member comments

  1. Living in Stockholm for some time, I would say the figures are a bit too low.
    On average 2 room apartment rent here starts from 12000 SEK/m + , for expats. So, for family of three, the cot of living in Stockholm would be around 20000 SEK /m minimum.

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For members

ECONOMY

What Taylor Swift’s Stockholm gigs tell us about the Swedish economy

Taylor Swift's visit to Stockholm is expected to boost the capital's economy with international fans grabbing a 'bargain' thanks to the low Swedish krona, despite the fact that hotel rooms are almost 300 percent more expensive than normal.

What Taylor Swift's Stockholm gigs tell us about the Swedish economy

The weak Swedish currency, the krona, means tickets for Swift’s three Stockholm dates are more affordable than elsewhere for many foreigners.

Fans around the world seem to have heeded Swift’s lyric “Grab your passport and my hand”, with “Swifties” from 130 countries flocking to Stockholm. Many queued through the night outside the Stockholm arena before the US star’s first concert on Friday.

“In total we will see approximately 150,000 people attending the concerts in Stockholm. Of them, 120,000 will be traveling to Stockholm,” Stockholm Chamber of Commerce chief economist Carl Bergkvist told AFP.

“They will be spending approximately half a billion Swedish kronor ($46 million) during their stay here in Stockholm,” he said.

That is money dished out on hotels, meals, shopping and transport, among other things, but not concert tickets or flights, Bergkvist said.

After opening her European tour in Paris last weekend, Swift’s Stockholm shows are her only dates in the Nordic region.

The Visit Stockholm tourism agency was also in on the hype, with its webpage on Friday proudly declaring “Welcome to Swiftholm”.

But last-minute tourists will struggle to find a hotel room in the city.

“We have approximately 40,000 rooms in Stockholm – 80,000 beds – and 120,000 people coming here. So we will be out of hotel rooms and we see a price spike of approximately 295 percent,” Bergkvist said.

“As soon as these three concerts were announced, there was immediately a surge in demand,” Åsa Lilja, commercial director at hotel chain Ligula Hospitality Group, told AFP.

“This also led to a rise in prices,” she said.

Swift-flation?

Sweden has only recently managed to bring down recent years’ stubbornly high inflation.

Economists have expressed fears that the Swift craze could send Swedish consumer prices rising again, as they did when pop diva Beyoncé opened her European tour in Stockholm last May.

“There’s a risk that prices will rise for hotel and restaurant visits, the concert tickets and everything that goes along with” the show, Danske Bank economist Michael Grahn wrote in a note.

However, “the price pressure would have to be even stronger than (the Beyoncé effect in May) last year to be reflected in the inflation figures”.

Swedish central bank governor Erik Thedeen even took the influx of foreign Swifties as a sign that the Swedish “krona was fundamentally undervalued”.

“It’s clearly a bargain to come to Stockholm,” he said.

Meanwhile, fans seemed ready to spend whatever it takes to see Swift perform.

“I spent around 7,500 kronor ($697) in total for three tickets. I think it’s worth it,” said Filippa, a 21-year-old Swedish fan queuing up early Friday for the evening’s concert.

 
 
 
 
 
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