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EXPLAINED: How much more will mortgages in Denmark cost next year?

Danes with one-, three- and five-year fixed mortages are set to see their interest rates jump to the highest level since the aftermath of the financial crisis in 2009.

home for sale in denmark
Many homeowners in Denmark are likely to see their mortgage payments increase next year. Photo: Mathias Svold/Ritzau Scanpix

Mortgage payments in Denmark are set to jump on January 1st, after mortgage bond auctions by Totalkredit and Realkredit set significantly higher rates for their so-called F1, F3, and F5 loans. 

The F1, or one-year fixed mortgage, will have an interest rate of 3.88 percent, while the F3 (three-year) and F5 (five-year) rates will be 3.39 and 3.37 respectively, Totalkredit announced in a press release, following four days of auctions. 

Similar auctions held by Realkredit Danmark set rates for the three loans at roughly the same level, with the F1 interest rate set at 4.05 percent, also the highest since 2009, the F3 interest rate at 3.39 percent, and the F5 interest rate at 3.33 percent.

How does Denmark’s mortgage system work? 

Denmark has a unique mortgage model. 

When you take out a loan to buy a house in Denmark, the bank finances the loan through a covered bond, or realkreditobligation. What makes the model unique is that you as the borrower know exactly which covered bond was issued to finance the loan.

Because of the way the Danish mortgage system is structured, mortgages are loaned primarily by banks which specialise in real estate loans, known as realkreditinstitutioner. The remainder of the mortgage is lent by the customer’s bank, which approves the mortgage to the homeowner.

Totalkredit, a subsidiary of the Nykredit bank, is Denmark’s largest provider of real estate loans for private homes, with Realkredit Danmark, which is owned by Danske Bank, the runner up. 

The bond auctions held this month saw Denmark’s realkreditinstitutioner refinance their one, three and five year loans, and also refinance two- and four-year loans which are used to structure amortisations. 

“They sell them to bond investors, who make bids, and that’s how the interest rate is fixed for these homeowners,” Brian Friis Helmer, a private economist at Arbejdernes Landsbank, told The Local. 

The banks and realkreditinstitutioner will then charge an extra percent or so, depending on the size of the loan and the risk profile of the individual borrower. 

What will the increase in rates mean for Danish borrowers?

If you have a three-year or five-year mortgage, it is pretty significant.  

“The last time they got a new interest rate was three and five years ago, and I think some of them have a negative interest rate on their loan, or close to zero, so it’s a big change in their monthly budget,”  Helmer told The Local. 

According to figures from Totalkredit, the bonds behind the previous three-year mortgage, which came into force in January 2021, had a rate of -0.33 percent, while those underpinning the previous five-year mortgage, which applied from January 2019, had a rate of 0.36 percent. 

This means that customers with a three-year loan will see their monthly payments increase by around 1,000 kroner a month per million kroner of mortgage, while those who stick with a five-year loan will see their mortgage payments increase by 830 kroner a month.  

Many people, however, have shifted to a one-year fixed loan, betting that rates will fall next year. 

They are having to pay a high price in the short term. Those who have moved from three-year to a one-year fixed mortgage will see their payments increase by 32,000 kroner after tax per million kroner mortgage over the year, while those who shifted from a five-year to a one-year mortgage will see their payments rise by 28,400 kroner. 

Helmer told Ritzau that homeowners faced a hit regardless of which of the realkreditinstitutioner they had their mortgage with

“Of course, there is a difference in the interest rates that are set, but they will land roughly at a rate of around 3.5 to 4 percent for home owners who have F-1, F-3 and F-5 loans, regardless of which mortgage institution they are customers with,” he said. 

How will the rise in payments affect Denmark’s economy?

Svend Greniman Andersen, senior economist at Totalkredit, pointed out that those affected by the higher rates only represented about five percent of Danish homeowners. 

“If you go back to the summer of last year, which is when rates started to really go up, so far, about half of homeowners with variable rate mortgages have had their rates fixed and increased,” he said.  

“So there’s still a half that has not had any impact yet. From January 1st, there will be an additional 10 percentage points – so that’s like of of of the ones with variable rates. So that’s five percent of all homeowners.” 

He said that the impact of the increased rate on consumption would as a result have only a limited impact on Danish consuption. 

“Whether that’s a small or big, I don’t know. If you’re an economist, you expect that people are anticipating this. They’re already taking it into account.” 

What can people do about the increase? 

Those with one, three and five-year mortgages had until the end of October to refinance with either a shorter or longer-rate mortgage. Those who did not do so will be stuck with the rates agreed this week. 

Andersen said that many people had this year decided to shift to a one-year fixed loan, betting that they will be able to move back to a one, three or five-year loan at the end of next year at a lower rate. 

He said his bank estimated that homeowners would see their interest rates peak next year, with payments likely to be unchanged, or even fall, in 2025. 

Helmer also said that he expected that rates had now peaked. 

“If you have chosen an F1 loan, our expectation is that there should not be any more interest rate increases when you get a new interest rate in a year’s time. Instead, the interest rate will perhaps remain unchanged or fall slightly.”

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PROPERTY

EXPLAINED: The four ways your rent can be regulated in Denmark

The rent landlords can charge you in Denmark is mostly -- but not entirely -- regulated. It's complicated. Here's how the system works.

EXPLAINED: The four ways your rent can be regulated in Denmark

It can be fairly tricky to determine which of the following systems should be used to regulate a fair rent for different apartments, Mogens Dürr, a lawyer who advises landlords in Denmark, told The Local.  

“You can’t choose which system you want to use. That’s determined in the law, but it’s quite difficult to differentiate between the categories of real estate.” 

Free market rent

In order to incentivise building companies to erect more rental apartments, most privately owned properties taken into use since the start of 1992 have not been subject to rent controls. This means the owners of most of the trendy harbourside developments in Copenhagen and Aarhus can charge whatever they can find someone willing to pay, with few controls. 

You can check when a building is considered to have been completed, or opført, by putting in the address in Denmark’s searchable Building and Housing Registry (BBR).  

Attic conversions, loft conversions, and warehouse conversions are also often subject to free market rent, even if the building was built before 1992, with Copenhagen Municipality, for instance, exempting attic conversions which were not used for housing before September 1st, 2002, from rent controls. 

READ ALSO: 

Cost-based rent 

Cost-based rent, called omkostningsbestemt husleje, is the simplest way of determining the rent a landlord can charge you under rent control laws, and is most commonly used to set rents for apartments in properties built before 1992 in municipalities which have not opted out of the Housing Regulation Act, or Boligreguleringsloven.  

Essentially, the landlord is supposed to add up all the operational and maintenance costs of running the apartment and then add a profit margin based on a seven percent return on the value of the property.

Cost based rent generally applies in properties in regulated municipalities which had more than seven tenancies  on New Year’s Day 1995.  

Leased value 

This, called lejedes værdi, is an alternative system which allows landlords to charge the rent they think is reasonable. This is the method used in the municipalities which have opted out of the Housing Regulation Act, and also to determine the rent for properties that had six or fewer tenancies on New Year’s Day 1995.

Municipalities in Denmark which have opted out include the Copenhagen suburb of Greve, and the Zealand town of Fredensborg, meaning rents there are only regulated under the weaker Tenancy Act or den almene lejelov.

Other municipalities which have opted out include Billund,   

Ikast-Brande,  Herning, Holstebro, Læsø Mariagerfjord, Rebild, Ringkøbing-Skjern, Samsø, Solrød, Struer, Thisted, Tønde, Varde, Vesthimmerland, and Ærø.

“It’s the owner who sets the rent when he makes a contract with a tenant,” said Mogens Dürr, who advises landlords in Denmark. “If he aims too high, he’s got a problem and if he aims too low, he’s got a problem too.” 

He said that judging a fair rent was based partly on knowledge of the market in the area where the property is situated, but also on studying cases where tenants have taken rents they consider unfair to the rent board and received a judgement. 

Section 5 paragraph 2 

Landlords can increase rent considerably if they make significant improvements in the property under Section 5 paragraph 2 of the Denmark’s rental law. Dürr said it was then possible for landlords to strike a deal with tenants that rent increases in future should instead be determined by an external price index.  

In 2024, the minimum investment to count as “significant improvements” is 2,497 kroner per m2 or a total of 295,515 kroner, but the number is updated every year. 

A few years ago, concern about companies using this section to increase rents led to the then government to bring in the so-called Blackstone-indgrebet, orBlackstone Intervention”, named after the US investment giant, which was accused of buying up properties across Denmark and using this section to push up rents. 

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