💡Die Analyse geht der Frage nach, welcher Anteil des Durchschnittsgehalts für die Anmietung einer Ein-Zimmer-Wohnung zum durchschnittlichen Marktpreis in den Hauptstädten Europas aufgewendet werden muss.

    🏡Mietwohnungen sind in Portugal am wenigsten erschwinglich, wo fast das gesamte Monatsgehalt – 95 % des Durchschnittslohns – für die Miete einer Ein-Zimmer-Wohnung erforderlich ist. Die günstigsten Konditionen gibt es in Bern in der Schweiz, wo eine solche Miete 24 % des Durchschnittslohns ausmacht.

    🔗Die vollständige Analyse und detaillierte Prozentwerte finden Sie unten: https://www.geozofija.com/affordability-analysis-what-percentage-of-salary-is-spent-on-renting-a-one-bathroom-apartment-in-european-cities

    🗂️Daten: Numbeo (2025). Visualisierung: Geozofija.

    📄 Die mediale und redaktionelle Nutzung ist mit korrekter Quellenangabe gestattet. Für den Zugriff auf die zugrunde liegenden Daten oder grafischen Materialien können Sie mich kontaktieren.

    Von Geozofija

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    33 Kommentare

    1. No-Buy-3530 on

      Paris can’t be right here? Always assumed kinda low wages relative to richer Europe, but very high rents due to international attention

    2. u/Geozofija your site is blocked over here (I’m obviously doing this from work). So I can’t check directly. But are you comparing country-wide average salaries with capital average rent prices? Because that means this map says – among other things – something about the economic difference between the capital and the country as a whole, and not about comparing, say, Lissabon to Madrid.

      What I mean to say: it could be that salaries in Lissabon are twice as high as the national average, and in Madrid they’re equal to national average. That would mean that roughly speaking, living and working in Lissabon vs Madrid gives you the same percentage of salary remaining after rent.

    3. nebanovaniracun on

      I wonder if this data is just average salary minus average rent or if it takes into account people owning the units. For example Belgrade is very much filled with socialist government housing and many people inherited apartments from their parents.

    4. Who the hell starts a cake Diagramm at three o clock?

      Also: depressing as f

    5. Your article links to where you got rental prices for each city, but not where you got salaries.

      And whether those salaries are a mean or a median, and also whether the salary data is just for the city itself or a wider region or even the whole country.

    6. Eastern Salaries, Western prices

      🇵🇹🇵🇹🇵🇹 r/PORTUGALCARALHO 🇵🇹🇵🇹🇵🇹

    7. neuroticnetworks1250 on

      Germany gets an undeserved good rep by showing Berlin. Munich is impossible to live in.

    8. “average net salary” is a really bad indicator here. France is generally richer than Portugal and there are relatively a lot of rich people in Paris. I’m almost sure if it changed to the “median” the results will be much worse for many cities here

    9. Mickleblade on

      Looks like French rent control works, although I thought it had been relaxed in Paris?

    10. RichardCrapper on

      Apparently I have more in common with Portugal than I previously thought.

    11. holytriplem on

      Kyiv and Chisinau proving that even a decrease in demand through mass depopulation can’t solve a housing crisis

    12. quaranteenagedirtbag on

      This isn’t the best way to visualise this data, it makes it really hard to compare. It would have been better if they were bars sorted by highest to lowest percentage spent on rent.

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