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City Guide

Property Investment in Dresden

571,510 residents · €2,971/m² average · ~4% gross yield. Every figure verified against primary sources (July 2026).

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Acquisition Calculator
German real estate financing simulator — Dresden
Purchase Price€210,000
Available Equity (Eigenkapital)€70,000
Property Transfer Tax (5.5%)€11,550
Notary & Land Registry (~2%)€4,200
LDP English Service & Brokerage Fee€6,300
Total Acquisition Capital Needed€232,050
Required Financing Loan€162,050
Est. Monthly Mortgage (3.8%)€783 / mo

Illustrative estimate at a 3.8% assumed interest rate (10y fixed, June 2026 market range 3.6–3.9%) plus 2% initial amortisation. Actual terms depend on the property, your profile and the lender. Not financial advice.

The Dresden market

Saxony applies the Mietpreisbremse only in Dresden and Leipzig: the state ordinance capping new-contract rents at 10% above the local comparative rent was extended on 1 July 2025 and runs until 30 June 2027, and the Kappungsgrenze for existing tenancies is lowered to 15% in three years (Sächsische Staatsregierung, https://www.medienservice.sachsen.de/medien/news/1091377). Demand is driven by 'Silicon Saxony' — TSMC's ESMC fab under construction plus Infineon, Bosch and GlobalFoundries expansions — alongside TU Dresden (~30,000 students) and strong tourism, though population dipped 0.4% in 2025. Total vacancy is still 6.7% (2024, city statistics), giving tenants options in peripheral Plattenbau areas, while new-build completions are thin and first-sale new flats jumped 11% in price to ~6,460 EUR/m2 in 2025. The Gutachterausschuss recorded ~5,080 transactions in 2025 (+11%), signalling a post-correction recovery. For investors: moderate entry prices (~2,700-3,000 EUR/m2 existing stock), gross yields around 4%, but rent-growth ceilings from the Mietpreisbremse and location-dependent vacancy risk.

Neighbourhoods we track

Äußere Neustadt (Antonstadt)Dresden's bohemian Gründerzeit quarter north of the Elbe with the city's densest bar, cafe and nightlife scene, popular with students and young professionals. (≈€3,000–€3,500/m²)

StriesenLeafy late-19th-century villa-and-apartment district east of the centre, a classic family and professional favourite. (≈€3,100–€3,250/m²)

BlasewitzPrestigious Elbe-side villa district by the Blaues Wunder bridge, among Dresden's most expensive addresses. (≈€3,200–€3,600/m²)

PieschenFormerly working-class Gründerzeit district on the Elbe's north bank, now visibly gentrifying with good value relative to Neustadt. (≈€2,750–€2,850/m²)

GorbitzLarge GDR-era prefab (Plattenbau) estate on the western edge — Dresden's cheapest apartment and rent segment with higher vacancy. (≈€2,450–€2,650/m²)

Loschwitz / Weißer HirschHillside villa quarters above the Elbe with landmark funiculars and top-end single-family stock — Dresden's premium residential slope. (≈€3,400–€3,650/m²)

All Dresden guides