First-home buyers chasing the city's tightest budget band are finding the answer depends almost entirely on which tunnelbana line they're willing to ride.
Five years after the pandemic buying frenzy reshaped the Swedish capital's property market, prices are rising once more, yet the fundamentals look nothing like the last boom.
A 34-storey apartment block greenlit for the southern edge of the city will add 380 homes to a district that has seen asking prices climb 11 percent in 18 months.