Property Investment in Dresden
571,510 residents · €2,971/m² average · ~4% gross yield. Every figure verified against primary sources (July 2026).
Schedule Free ConsultationIllustrative 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)
Striesen — Leafy late-19th-century villa-and-apartment district east of the centre, a classic family and professional favourite. (≈€3,100–€3,250/m²)
Blasewitz — Prestigious Elbe-side villa district by the Blaues Wunder bridge, among Dresden's most expensive addresses. (≈€3,200–€3,600/m²)
Pieschen — Formerly working-class Gründerzeit district on the Elbe's north bank, now visibly gentrifying with good value relative to Neustadt. (≈€2,750–€2,850/m²)
Gorbitz — Large 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 Hirsch — Hillside villa quarters above the Elbe with landmark funiculars and top-end single-family stock — Dresden's premium residential slope. (≈€3,400–€3,650/m²)
