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Hallo zusammen.
Entschuldigung für das Schreiben auf Englisch, aber ich spreche nicht norwegisch.
Kurz gesagt, wir versuchen, ein Haus in Norwegen zu kaufen und bin auf diese Seite gestoßen
https://homestra.com/List/houses-for-sale/norway/?sort-by=price-hoigh-thow
Ich habe meinen maximalen Preis auf 350.000 EUR gesetzt und hier einige fantastische Immobilien erhalten.
Meine Frage ist, dass ich aus Kroatien, wo Immobilienpreise explodiert sind, in Norwegen viel mehr für 350.000 als hier bekomme. Im Grunde was ist der Haken? Sind diese Preise ein Betrug oder lese ich etwas falsch? Angesichts der weltweit der drei Top -3 -Länder für die Lebensqualität scheinen diese Preise für das, was Sie bekommen, unangemessen billig zu sein.
Ich danke Ihnen für Ihre Hilfe.
Need help understanding these home prices.
byu/Most-Inflation-1022 inNorway
Von Most-Inflation-1022
15 Kommentare
Well, you are generally not allowed to live in «cabins» and «holidays homes».
These cabins are also typically very remote and with limited to no support from the municipality or with any utilities (water, sewage, garbage disposal).
The catch is that a lot of these houses are in bum-fuck nowhere. So housing prices there are very reasonable considering few people *want to* move there, there aren’t a lot of things to do nearby, and they’re far from resources or town centers.
But if you have a car and no need for local excitement, these could be a great deal for someone who can work from home or is retired. If you want to have a regular corporate job in the city, these are usually far from any reasonable commuting distance.
Also, anywhere that’s designated as a cabin/holiday home/etc is legally distinct from a regular home. So you can’t live there year-round. And there are other restrictions I’m not too familiar with.
Location location location.
1.first time i see this website so cannot vouch for the results. Norwegian properties are mostly on Finn or Hjem
2. These houses[mostly cabins] are in the middle of nowhere, hence the price. In Oslo the prices are much higher.
3. NORWEGIAN crown has lost almost 50 % of its value against the euro in the last 20 years. Therefore prices in Euro might not seem that high anymore compared to other EEA countries.
4. Just because a property is cheap to buy does not mean it is cheap. Everything is expensive here, so you might spend a lot more on maintenance then the purchase price of you don’t choose wisely
You would probably be better off using [www.finn.no](http://www.finn.no) to compare. This is the main site used for sellers of property in Norway. Here you can also find statistics for an area and what the listing has been sold for earlier.
A lot of the ones that came up less than 350k is cabins, and they may or may not be registered for all year living.
You can find nice homes for less than 350k Euro but they will not be any major cities, more likely more than 1 hour away from larger cities. and might also be away from smaller city centers. A lot of people in these areas commute to the major cities for work.
You should be using [Finn.no](http://Finn.no) too, if not mainly, to look for houses, convert your 350k Euro to NOK (4,150,000 roughtly) and search for enebolig if you are after a single family house. Houses cost different values in different countries, there is no mystery here… €350k to me seems high… Where I grew up, (not Norway) houses are still €200K for decent places. Norway has a wide range of prices, the cheaper the house the further out from anything they are, i.e., the middle of nowhere. Did you mean to write 350k NOK? In that case those are all cabins in the middle of nowhere, old and run down ones usually.
Look at Finn.no exclusively.
Is it specifically a cabin / holiday cottage you’re looking for, without living in Norway ?
You should use [finn.no](http://finn.no) for properties in Norway.
Many of the properties listed there looks like holiday homes, so you cannot live in them on a permenent basis.
If these cabins are ‚recreational properties‘ I believe you can only live in them for a max of 6 months a year.
I took a brief look using a 350k filter and what i found was mostly „hytte/cabins“ (meaning „2nd home holiday/weekend getaways“, mostly in mountainous areas) or houses in very rural areas. Where prices are much lower than in urban areas. 350k won’t buy you much in most urban areas. Maybe a 25m2 apartment in Oslo 😉
But I am not an expert. My son just bought a 60m2 apartment in Oslo, it cost him nearly 600k Euros.
Because youre not allowed to live in a cabin, most cabins dont have municipality services like waste removal, snow plowing etc, and cabins are usually not located anywhere near jobs and other necessities.
This site seems to have prices all wrong.
[](https://homestra.com/property/spacious-family-home-with-sunny-balconies-and-river-views-updated-amenities/)
[Villa in Norway](https://homestra.com/list/houses-for-sale/norway/?property-type=villa)
€6,500,000
This is blatantly wrong. It should be in NOK, not €.
Use [finn.no](http://finn.no)
The best way to get a realistic picture of house prices is finn.no/eiendom and then „Bolig til salgs“. Beware that prices vary very much from urban to less urban areas, Oslo being very expensive
[https://www.finn.no/realestate/homes/search.html?filters=&lifecycle=1&price_collective_to=4140000&property_type=2&property_type=4&property_type=1&ownership_type=3](https://www.finn.no/realestate/homes/search.html?filters=&lifecycle=1&price_collective_to=4140000&property_type=2&property_type=4&property_type=1&ownership_type=3)
Here is all houses (detached, split and chained) in the whole country that cost less than 350k EUR at asking price (there may be a bidding round). Not including apartments.
Norway in general has cheap houses. Almost zero taxes, insurance is cheap and the houses are well made. I am comparing it to other countries. Foreigners have no idea. It seems difficult to buy a house but it isn’t. If you buy in cash, Norway has minimum beraucracy, people are generally honest and there are inspection involved. All this reduces risks