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How much do you need to earn in Germany to buy a million euro home?

Thinking of purchasing your dream home in Germany? We look at how much you might have to earn to secure a high-end property - and where you can find a better deal.

flats in Munich
Apartments in Munich. Real property prices saw a precipitous drop last year in the Bavarian capital - but they remain the highest in the country overall. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Peter Kneffel

Most of us have daydreamed about living in our very own stunning home in a fantastic location. But just how likely is it for the average person to achieve this?

One thing is for certain – you have to earn a fair bit of money to buy a home in Germany. Recent studies give an idea of how high your salary would need to be to secure a million euro property.  

READ ALSO: Is it a good time to buy a home in Germany?

How much money do you need for a €1 million home?

For 100 square meters – preferably with your own garden – you have to dig deep into your pockets in Germany. The most expensive properties are in the south, mainly in Munich as well in the far north in the district of Nordfriesland. A house or apartment of this size costs around €1 million in these places.

For example, a luxury ground floor four-room, 105 square metres apartment with a garden in Munich’s Obermenzing suburb costs just under €1.3 million in August 2024. 

Very few people have that kind of money sitting in their bank. But even getting a mortgage would be unaffordable for most people.

And remember – this is Germany. There are plenty of hidden costs you have to consider when buying a home. In addition to the actual purchase price of around a million euros, there’s the property transfer tax, which is between 3.5 and 6.5 percent of the purchase price depending on the federal state.

READ ALSO: The fees you have to pay when buying a home in Germany 

Furthermore, there is a broker’s commission of at least 3.57 percent and the costs for the notary and land registry entry. As a rule, you can add 12.5 percent to the purchase price. For a property worth a million, that would be a whopping €125,000. 

According to data compiled earlier this year by the service provider Dr. Klein, the typical German home buyer currently finances a home of this price with equity of around 13.6 percent. That would be around €153,000, which you would already need to have saved up.

Pictured is a house and keys.

What should you know if you’re thinking about buying a home? Photo by Tierra Mallorca on Unsplash

The remaining sum is covered by a property loan. According to an analysis by the financier Interhyp, the interest rate for a fixed interest loan of 15 years is around an average of 3.54 percent. Added to this is the initial repayment of around 1.82 percent on average. Together, this results in a monthly loan instalment of about €4,340 for the €1 million home. 

That’s roughly how much gross pay most Germans earn per month. But you’d want to spend your salary on more than just loan instalments. That’s why financial experts recommend limiting the monthly instalment to a maximum of 30 percent of your monthly net income.

If €4,340 were 30 percent of your net income, you would have to earn €13,033 net (after tax) every month. What that would mean for your gross income varies hugely depending on your life situation – for example, which tax bracket you are in, whether you have children, whether you’re married or are helping care for your parents, etc. 

For instance, as a single person without children and with a church membership in North Rhine-Westphalia, you would have to earn around €23,500 gross per month to reach this net amount. This probably won’t surprise you, but according to the Cologne Institute for Economic Research (IW Köln), not even one percent of Germans manage this. Even if you team up with your partner to buy a property together, you would both have to be in the top one per cent of German incomes.

READ ALSO: How much do you have to make to be considered rich in Germany?

Is it impossible to buy my dream home?

If you do want to buy a home like this, you may have to scale down slightly. One option would be to avoid the most expensive areas of Germany. While Munich and the posh island of Sylt are unaffordable for most, the average price for 100 square metres in the big cities like Berlin, Hamburg, Frankfurt, Stuttgart, Cologne and Düsseldorf is €675,000, according to the Postbank Wohnatlas 2024.

This could be paid for with a monthly income of around €15,000 gross. As a couple, you can achieve this if you both belong to the top six per cent of earners in the country.

Luxury apartments in Berlin.

Luxury apartments in Berlin. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Bernd von Jutrczenka

In other major cities in the country, the average price for 100 square metres including ancillary costs falls to around €350,000. To finance this, you need a monthly net income of about €4,562. You can achieve this as a single person in the top five percent of German incomes and as a couple on an average income.

Buying a house is even cheaper in medium-sized towns or in rural districts. Here, the average, including extra costs, is €317,000 for 100 square metres. A monthly net income of about €4,132 is sufficient for this. This is still a lot for a single earner, but for a couple with two incomes it is absolutely affordable.

The alternative would be to downsize your dreams. If you try and opt for 80 square metres, you’d save around €135,000 in the priciest cities, €70,000 in all other large cities and around €63,000 in medium-sized cities and rural districts – with a corresponding reduction in the income required for getting a mortgage, of course. 

READ ALSO: What you need to know about buying property in Germany

The third option is to exceed the typical financing conditions – i.e. either contribute significantly more equity than 13.6 percent (for instance if you received a large inheritance or money from selling a previous property) or spend more than 30 percent of your net income on the loan. In these cases, however, you may have to make significant cutbacks in other areas of your life.

Why is property is so expensive?

The fact that property is so unaffordable for so many people is due to two phenomena. While interest rates from the European Central Bank (ECB) and therefore average property interest rates were low during the 2010s, property prices skyrocketed.

From 2016 to 2022 alone, prices rose by an average of more than 10 percent per year. The fact that too few new flats have been built in Germany for years also plays a role. The low supply is driving up prices. Although purchase prices fell by around 10 percent on average last year during an economic slump, the level remains very high. On average, prices in Germany have risen by 66 percent since 2016.

Member comments

  1. How did the installment payment of €4,340 get calculated? Payments on €972,000 over 180 months @ 3.54% is roughly €6,967.77. Seems it was calculated over 360 months?

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PROPERTY

IN CHARTS: How German property prices are forecast to rise over next decade

In what may come as welcome news to those looking to buy property in Germany, the WohnAtlas 2024 reveals that German cities saw a clear drop in real property prices last year - with only small increases forecasted until 2035.

IN CHARTS: How German property prices are forecast to rise over next decade

If you’re expecting a raise, where might you be able to afford a home in Germany?

After all, if property prices in your part of Germany only went up a little in the last year, but your salary increased by a lot more – a home has suddenly become more affordable for you, even if the listed price for an average one where you live went up slightly. This is what’s mean by “real” property prices. It measures the bang you get for the money you actually earn – which could effect your homeowning chances.

Using calculations by the Hamburg Institute for the World Economy (HWWI), the 2024 Postbank WohnAtlas revealed that real property prices will probably increase only slightly over the next ten years or so – meaning that homes aren’t likely to get a lot more affordable – or unaffordable – than they already are.

Last year, most of Germany actually saw a fall in these real property prices. In 2023, only 16 of Germany’s 400 or so odd regions actually saw an increase in real property prices – that is where listing prices are going up at a faster pace than salaries.

In fact, some of the places that saw the biggest drops might surprise you – as charts compiled by The Local suggest.

Real Property Price Drops Germany

Chart by Aaron Burnett using Datawrapper.

The largest real property price drop was seen in Bayreuth in northern Bavaria – one of the world’s landmark spots for opera. According to the WohnAtlas, property there is almost 25 percent more affordable than it was at the end of 2022.

In a development that might surprise some, the Bavarian state capital of Munich – statistically the most expensive place to live in Germany – actually became a more affordable place to buy a flat or house last year. Even so, as another chart below demonstrates, it remains the most expensive place in Germany to buy property.

The national capital of Berlin, which has seen clear spikes in property values in recent years, even saw a price decrease in real terms – although by much less than seen in some other German cities and regions.

READ ALSO: Germany seeing price ‘turnaround’ on property market

How will prices trend overtime?

Although forecasts are by no means guaranteed, the WohnAtlas generally predicts that real property prices are likely to remain fairly stable over the next decade or so – with only slight increases predicted to 2035.

Again, that doesn’t mean listed property prices aren’t going to go up, but rather that wages should generally keep pace with home prices as they rise – argues the WohnAtlas.

Even in Germany’s largest and most expensive cities, property prices aren’t necessarily going to run away from your paycheque.

Real Property Price Forecasts Germany

Real property price increases measure the degree to which property prices will rise – while taking salary increases into account. They are thus designed to keep tabs on affordability.

The city slated to see the largest real increase in property prices over the next decade is the Saxon city of Leipzig, which can expect a 2.2 percent increase in real terms over the next 10 or so years. At the same time, Germany’s traditionally more expensive cities will see their property affordability relative to salaries suffer only slightly. According to the forecast, Hamburg’s will barely move at all.

READ ALSO: What you need to know about buying property in Germany

Where is it already expensive?

Of course, just because a German city or region has become relatively more affordable – or at least not forecasted to see too much of a price increase relative to wages, that can be of little comfort to potential buyers who are already dealing with a lack of affordable property.

WohnAtlas data reveals clear disparities in overall price per square metre.

German Property Price per qm

In what is unlikely to come as a big surprise for many, Munich remains by far the most expense place to purchase property in Germany, with the average price per square metre more than double Leipzig’s, for example.

Even if prices may be headed for stabilisation in Germany for a few years – the cost to buy still remains high in many cases.

READ ALSO: How much do you need to earn in Germany to buy a million euro home?

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