East Germany’s housing market splits into winners and laggards

Dutch Quarter, Potsdam, Brandenburg
Dutch Quarter, Potsdam, Brandenburg (Photo: Dudlajzov/Depositphotos.com)

East Germany remains one of the few regions in Germany where rents and purchase prices sit well below national levels, where negotiation is still possible and where yields can look attractive. Yet the region is no longer the quiet corner it once was. DZ Hyp’s new Real Estate Market in Eastern Germany 2025/2026 report, together with fresh Immowelt data, sets out a more fractured picture. Stronger cities are tightening, mid-tier markets are grinding forward and structurally weak locations face mounting strain.

Average initial rents across the major eastern centres reached €12.60 per square metre in 2024, compared with almost €14 nationally. Berlin has surged ahead at €19.70, and Potsdam now sits at €17.50. Chemnitz remains well below €10. DZ Hyp expects first-let rents to rise by 3 to 4 per cent annually through 2025 and 2026 because new construction is too weak to offset demand.

On paper, the eastern states have more than enough dwellings. There are 7.2 million flats for 6.6 million households. In practice, this numerical surplus conceals deeper structural problems. Much of the stock is old, oversized or located in the wrong places. Berlin, Leipzig and Dresden continue to absorb inflows while Chemnitz, Halle and Schwerin contend with higher vacancy and low rents that restrict maintenance. Where landlords cannot fund repairs, entire neighbourhoods risk sliding into deterioration. Re-let rents underline the gap. Chemnitz averaged only €6.40 per square metre last year, less than half the level achieved in Potsdam at €13.20.

A major friction point is the mismatch between household size and available units. Around 41 per cent of households in the eastern states consist of single occupants, rising to 53 per cent in Berlin. Yet two-room flats account for only 13 per cent of the regional stock. Many people occupy large flats that families need but cannot access because the existing occupants have no practical reason to move. New construction is still skewed towards large units rather than the smaller flats that the market increasingly requires. Berlin has begun to correct this, with almost 60 per cent of completions being small units, but most eastern states remain far behind.

Prices rise again but divergence sharpens

The Immowelt figures confirm the renewed momentum. Asking prices for condominiums rose in 72 of the 76 eastern cities and districts over the past year. Leipzig increased by 10.8 per cent to €2,545 per square metre. Halle rose by 12.4 per cent to €2,533. Rostock gained 10.7 per cent to €4,011. Dresden climbed by 5 per cent to €2,744 and Erfurt by 10 per cent to €2,792. Berlin’s increase was more modest at 2.9 per cent, although at €4,883 per square metre it remains the most expensive eastern market by a wide margin.

Some of the sharpest gains occurred in rural regions surrounding costly urban centres. Oberhavel, north of Berlin, saw prices jump 13.1 per cent to €3,409 per square metre. Uckermark rose by 12.7 per cent to €2,076. Ostprignitz-Ruppin increased by 11.4 per cent and Mecklenburgische Seenplatte by 12.2 per cent. These districts reflect affordability-driven outflows from Berlin and strengthened commuter patterns.

Housing in Chemnitz
Housing in Chemnitz (Photo: tupungato/Depositphotos.com)

Despite these gains, most markets have not fully recovered from the 2022 correction. Prices in 61 of the 76 cities and districts remain below their levels of three years ago. In Berlin, flats are still 4.5 per cent cheaper than in 2022. Some rural districts in Thuringia are down by more than 15 per cent. Only Leipzig, Magdeburg and Halle have exceeded their 2022 values. For buyers, this creates room for negotiation in many locations. For owners, long-term tenancies continue to depress yields across much of the region, with existing rents in parts of Brandenburg still below €6 per square metre.

A clear divide is now visible. Berlin, Leipzig and Dresden benefit from strong demand, low vacancy and a widening technology and research base. Rostock, Potsdam, Erfurt and Magdeburg sit in a middle tier with more measured growth and stable conditions. Chemnitz, parts of Halle and Schwerin face a tougher combination of demographic drag, low rent ceilings and the persistent inability to finance stock renewal. In these weaker markets, low acquisition prices can disguise value traps. Absorption is slow, vacancies accumulate and rent growth has limited scope to catch up.

A market realigning around product, location and household size

The core paradox of the eastern housing market persists. Surplus stock on paper does not translate into availability where it matters. Modern and barrier-free flats remain scarce. Units suitable for single households are undersupplied relative to the demographic structure. New construction volumes are insufficient and still weighted towards flats that do not reflect today’s demand profile.

Internal migration still favours the Berlin-Leipzig-Dresden corridor, though several mid-sized cities have at last stabilised after years of population loss. Rising household outlays and a weaker economy will curb rental growth even in stronger markets. Commercial indicators reinforce the uneven picture. Retail rents have fallen sharply from their 2010s highs, especially in Halle. Offices show rising vacancy in older stock and continued shortages of modern, ESG-compliant space. Berlin’s prime office rents have reached about €45 per square metre, while Leipzig and Dresden remain broadly stable.

The next two years are likely to bring steady rather than dramatic shifts. First-let rents should continue rising in line with forecasts. Asking prices in stronger locations and commuter belts are likely to edge closer to their 2022 peaks. Yet the deeper structural issues that underpin the region’s divergence will remain. A fragmented stock profile, household-size mismatch and uneven economic growth will keep the region’s markets moving at different speeds.

For investors, this is a market that demands selective positioning. Modern small-unit stock in growth cities stands to benefit most from rising rents. Commuter districts north and west of Berlin offer scope for further price recovery. Weaker markets require great caution, not only because of vacancy risk but also due to limited rent headroom. nvestors who focus on the strongest micro-markets and avoid the most fragile ones will be best placed as East Germany continues its slow realignment.

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