1. Dwelling stock 2016
2.9 million dwellings
At the end of 2016, there were 2,968,000 dwellings in Finland, of which 314,000 were without permanent occupants. The dwelling stock went up by 34,000 dwellings from the previous year. From 1990, the building stock has increased by 759,000 dwellings, or by about 29,000 dwellings per year. Compared to 1990, 135,000 more dwellings were without permanent occupants. The growth in the building stock has been slowing down from the preceding decade. Most dwellings have been built in the 1970s- and 1980`s. Residential building construction has centred in urban municipalities. In all, 78 per cent of the dwellings completed in the 1995 to 2016 period are located in urban areas.
46 per cent of all dwellings are in blocks of flats
As recently as 1990, the numbers of dwellings in detached houses and blocks of flats were still almost equal. At that time, dwellings in blocks of flats numbered 939,000 and those in detached houses only 4,000 fewer. The share of dwellings in blocks of flats grew over the 1990s, however. At the end of 2016, 46 per cent of all dwellings were in blocks of flats, i.e. 1,352,000 which is 198,000 more dwellings in blocks of flats than in detached houses. The number of terraced houses has grown over tenfold since 1970. In 1970 they numbered only 30,000 but the figure had gone up to 405,000 by the end of 2016.
The number of blocks of flats with no lift relatively high
The number of blocks of flats with more than three storeys was around 24,000, of which 2,300 had no lift. Dwellings in blocks of flats with more than three storeys and no lift numbered 69,000 and had 96,000 occupants, of whom 15,000 were aged over 65. It was even less usual to have a lift in a three-storey building. Nineteen per cent of the 352,000 dwellings in buildings with three storeys were in blocks of flats with a lift. In all, 400,000 Finns, of whom 77,000 were aged over 65, lived in three-storey buildings with no lift. In 2016 the lift information has been supplemented by the help of the information of the real estate register of the tax administration.
Average floor area of dwellings 80 square metres
In 2016 the average floor area of a dwelling was 79.9 square metres. The average floor area of the dwelling stock has grown by about 20 square metres since 1970. The average floor area of a one-room unit was 34 square metres, that of a two-room unit 54 square metres, and that of a three-room unit and a kitchen 79 square metres. Despite the growth in the average size of dwellings, there were about 123,000 dwellings of under 30 square metres. In contrast, only 27 per cent of dwellings have a floor area of over 100 square metres. There are 437,000 one-room units with a kitchen or kitchenette, i.e. 15 per cent of the dwelling stock. The most common type of dwelling is a two-room unit. There are 890,000 two-room units with a kitchen or kitchenette, i.e. 30 per cent of the dwelling stock.
Table 1. Floor area per dwelling (m2) by type of building in 1970–2016
Year | Type of building | ||||
Total | Detached houses | Attached houses | Blocks of flats | Other buildings | |
1970 | 60,0 | 66,0 | 73,0 | 51,0 | 54,0 |
1980 | 69,3 | 83,6 | 71,7 | 54,8 | 55,5 |
1990 | 74,4 | 95,3 | 70,2 | 55,8 | 59,7 |
2000 | 76,5 | 101,9 | 70,0 | 56,1 | 59,8 |
2010 | 79,5 | 108,4 | 71,2 | 56,5 | 60,7 |
2015 | 80,0 | 111,0 | 71,3 | 56,4 | 60,9 |
2016 | 79,9 | 111,5 | 71,4 | 56,3 | 60,6 |
The average floor area of an owner-occupied dwelling was 97 square metres and most of them are in detached houses. The average floor area of a rental dwelling was 52 square metres and most of them are in blocks of flats. In the dwelling stock statistics the tenure status is mainly defined for permanently occupied dwellings. The tenure status is also defined for a dwelling not permanently occupied when a dwelling is located in a rented dwelling subsidised by the state or a dwelling is temporarily occupied. Of all dwellings, the number of rented dwellings was around 926,000 at the end of 2016 and 854,000 of them were permanently occupied dwellings. The number of rented dwellings has grown by 393,000 since 1990.
Number of non-subsidised rented dwellings increased further in 2016
According to Statistics Finland, a total of 30,300 new dwellings were completed in 2016, of which 42 per cent were rented dwellings. Around 10,000 of the completed dwellings were new non-subsidised rented dwellings, which is nearly four times more than interest-subsidised rented dwellings. Of the buildings completed in this decade, on average, two times more are non-subsidised rented dwellings than interest-subsidised ones. Thirty-three per cent of these non-subsidised rented dwellings and 42 per cent of interest-subsidised rented dwellings are in Greater Helsinki.
30,300 dwellings were completed in 2016
In 2016, a total of 30,300 dwellings were completed, of which 7,100 were in detached houses, 3,500 in terraced houses and 19,600 in blocks of flats. Approximately 9,000 new dwellings were completed in Greater Helsinki, 7,500 of them in blocks of flats. Sixty per cent of new dwellings in blocks of flats were rented dwellings at the end of 2016.
Figure 1. Dwellings completed in 2016, number
New blocks of flats completed in 2016 had over 10,000 rented dwellings. Around 2,500 of them were interest-subsidised rented dwellings supported by the state. Government-subsidised rented dwellings do not here include rented dwellings with short-term interest subsidy loans, or of the so-called interim model.
Source: Dwellings and Housing Conditions, Statistics Finland
Inquiries: Otto Kannisto 029 551 3044, Marja Hermiö 029 551 3211, info@stat.fi
Director in charge: Jari Tarkoma
Updated 11.10.2017
Official Statistics of Finland (OSF):
Dwellings and housing conditions [e-publication].
ISSN=1798-6761. Overview 2016,
1. Dwelling stock 2016
. Helsinki: Statistics Finland [referred: 21.11.2024].
Access method: http://www.stat.fi/til/asas/2016/01/asas_2016_01_2017-10-11_kat_001_en.html