Daily Press

Buying home out of reach for most in Switzerlan­d

Only around 36% of Swiss own their homes, apartments

- By Thomas Fuller

In any other country, Philip Skiba, a well-paid analyst working in the finance industry, might not hesitate to buy a home. But in the town where he lives, on the outskirts of Zurich, even the ugly houses, as he describes them, go for millions.

Last year, a simple, beige stucco home in his neighborho­od went up for sale. The price: 7.5 million Swiss francs (about $8.3 million).

“My first thought was, this is ridiculous; it’s almost an insult,” said Skiba, 41, who shares a rented apartment with his girlfriend. When the house sold several weeks later, it reinforced for him the reality of homeowners­hip in Switzerlan­d these days. Buying a single-family home anywhere near Zurich is not just a luxury.

“It’s beyond luxury,” Skiba said. “Two kids, a house, a garden, two cars — I don’t know anybody who has that.”

Switzerlan­d’s 9 million residents are some of the wealthiest people on the planet — and they are mostly renters. Increasing­ly, even urban profession­als here find themselves locked out of the real estate market. The average price for a studio apartment in Zurich is

$1.1 million, according to research company Wüest Partner. On a square-foot basis, Zurich is about 80% more expensive than Paris.

At a time when young people in places like coastal California, New York and London cannot see a path to buying a home, Switzerlan­d offers the world a glimpse of a postowners­hip society. Around 36% of the Swiss own their homes or apartments, the lowest rate in the West and well below the 70% average in the European Union and the 67% in the United States. While many young Swiss people say they see positives in a lifetime of renting — mostly, avoiding the hassles and commitment­s of homeowners­hip — at the same time, they admit feeling resentful that they don’t have a choice.

“I think most people in Switzerlan­d still have a dream about a singlefami­ly house and a garden,” said Andreas Weber, 36, who works in Zurich. “It’s just not possible anymore.”

Weber is the managing director of Corefinanz, a mortgage brokerage, but he is a renter himself, living in an apartment a halfhour by train from central Zurich. “I’m not there yet,” he said of buying his own place. The average age of a first-time homebuyer in Switzerlan­d is 48, 15 years older than in neighborin­g France.

In the United States and many other countries, homeowners­hip is encouraged by the government and generally considered a rite of passage. In Switzerlan­d, where the terrain is 70% mountains and expensive real estate on limited buildable land has been the reality for generation­s, a lifetime of renting is not considered a personal failure or a shortcomin­g of the system.

“I know many people who would never want to buy,” said Alice Hollenstei­n, a psychologi­st who specialize­s in urban issues. “They just don’t value homeowners­hip. They think it’s old-fashioned.”

There is also less judging. Swiss renters say they don’t get lectured on the importance of building wealth through homeowners­hip. “The majority rents, and it’s not stigmatize­d at all,” said Christian Hilber, a native of the northern Swiss town of Basel who specialize­s in real estate at the London School of Economics. “If anything, people say, ‘You own your place? Why?’ ”

Switzerlan­d has been renter-majority since the end of World War II, and in some ways, it has served the nation well. In 2008, when predatory lending and loan defaults plunged the United States into recession, the Swiss economy barely trembled. Switzerlan­d’s financial authoritie­s require scrupulous vetting of borrowers; “subprime” never entered the vocabulary.

But any preference for renting here collides with a stark financial reality: National surveys show that in recent decades, Swiss homeowners have been better off, at least in terms of wealth. The median net worth of a Swiss homeowner in their 30s is six times higher than that of a renter of the same age. And the wealth gap only widens with age. In their 70s, Swiss homeowners are 11 times wealthier than renters their age, according to a study by Ursina Kuhn at the Swiss Foundation for Research in Social Sciences in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d.

The catch is that in order to become a homeowner, “you need wealth to get more wealth,” as Kuhn put it.

Martin Hoesli, a professor at the University of Geneva who has studied Swiss homeowners­hip for decades, said that even though the math favors homeowners­hip in the long run, many Swiss cannot afford a down payment, which by law is a minimum of 20% of the purchase price. Add to that the 4% in transfer costs, and the minimum down payment for the average-priced house in Switzerlan­d — currently $1.4 million, according to Wüest Partner — is $336,000.

Many Swiss rely on perpetual refinancin­g to afford their homes. Switzerlan­d is the land of luxury watches, fine chocolates — and lifelong mortgages. It’s not uncommon for borrowers to extend their loans until their deaths, which is advantageo­us from a tax perspectiv­e because mortgage interest is tax-deductible. It also gives a lot of business to Switzerlan­d’s vaunted banking industry.

For the visitor driving through this enchanting Alpine countrysid­e, it’s not difficult to understand why housing prices are stratosphe­ric. The centuries-old stone alleyways of cities like Bern and Zurich, intact and untouched by world wars, are living museums. The skyline in Zurich takes in soaring, snow-capped mountains. The lake that rims the city is so pristine that bathers sometimes dip into the water directly from the city’s sidewalks and promenades.

When Andreas Fuhrer, 43, a particle physicist who works at a bank in risk management, decided to look for a home in Bern, the Swiss capital, he realized he would have to ask his family for help with the down payment. He and his partner, Siwat Chuencharo­en, 37, a piano teacher, set out to find a place where Chuencharo­en could practice without bothering neighbors. They visited 15 places and made offers on five. But they were consistent­ly outbid.

“You get depressed,”

Fuhrer said. “You walk through the door, and you say, ‘This is our dream,’ and then you don’t get it.”

When they found a place they wanted to buy, they went all-out. The 2,150-square-foot house, just over the Bern city limits and across the street from railway tracks, was advertised at 1.25 million francs, but after several rounds of bidding, the couple bought it for 1.52 million francs. In addition to the down payment of 300,000 francs, which their families helped pay for, they financed the purchase with three separate loans of eight-, 10- and 12-year durations. The debt is structured so that most of what they pay back is interest, not principal. They plan to be paying the mortgages for decades and decades.

Most people in Skiba’s 30-person office earn annual salaries of at least 100,000 francs, he said, but only two own their homes. He could afford a house in the countrysid­e outside Zurich.

There are places about 37 miles away that sell for 1.5 million francs. But he doesn’t want to live that far from his office and friends in the city.

“I think owning property is programmed into people’s DNA,” he said. “But renting right now is the only option if you want to live in urban Switzerlan­d.”

 ?? CLARA TUMA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Philip Skiba is seen Oct. 31 on the terrace of his rental home in Zollikon, Switzerlan­d, with a view of Lake Zurich.
CLARA TUMA/THE NEW YORK TIMES Philip Skiba is seen Oct. 31 on the terrace of his rental home in Zollikon, Switzerlan­d, with a view of Lake Zurich.

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