Property Investment in Hamburg
1,862,565 residents · €6,273/m² average · ~2.6% 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 Hamburg market
The Mietpreisbremse applies city-wide in Hamburg and was renewed by the Senate until 31 December 2029 (new leases capped at ~10% above the ortsübliche Vergleichsmiete; official Mietenspiegel 2025 comparison rent €9.94/m²) — https://www.hamburg.de/politik-und-verwaltung/behoerden/behoerde-fuer-stadtentwicklung-und-wohnen/aktuelles/pressemeldungen/senat-erlaesst-mietpreisbegrenzungsverordnung-bis-ende-2029-1120602. Numerous inner districts sit in soziale Erhaltungsverordnungen with strict condo-conversion protection, plus a city-wide Zweckentfremdungsverbot restricting short-term letting. Buyers pay 5.5% Grunderwerbsteuer (raised from 4.5% on 1 Jan 2023; reduced 3.5% rate for qualifying first-time buyers/young families) — https://www.bfw-newsroom.de/hamburg-grunderwerbsteuer-ab-2023-bei-55-prozent/. With market-active vacancy of only ~0.5% and population growth of +0.6% p.a., excess demand is structural, keeping asking rents rising even as purchase prices only stabilise. Demand is underpinned by Germany's largest seaport and logistics economy, a leading media/publishing cluster, and the Airbus aerospace hub in Finkenwerder.
Neighbourhoods we track
Eppendorf — Elegant Altbau quarter near the Alster canals with the Isemarkt and the UKE university-hospital cluster — one of Hamburg's classic premium addresses. (≈€5,572–€12,543/m²)
Winterhude — Leafy, affluent district on the west side of the Außenalster with the Mühlenkamp café strip and Stadtpark — highly liquid owner-occupier market. (≈€7,027–€9,180/m²)
HafenCity — Europe's largest inner-city development project — waterfront new-build towers around the Elbphilharmonie, almost entirely post-2005 stock at top-of-market prices. (≈€6,560–€11,860/m²)
Ottensen (Altona) — Former workers' quarter turned creative/media hotspot with dense Gründerzeit stock, indie retail and strong gentrification pressure. (≈€5,730–€9,541/m²)
Barmbek-Nord — Dense red-brick 1920s–30s housing district in Hamburg-Nord, a solid mid-market rental area popular with young professionals priced out of the Alster belt. (≈€4,323–€9,065/m²)
Wilhelmsburg — Multicultural Elbe-island regeneration area (IBA/igs legacy) south of the harbour — Hamburg's most affordable entry point with visible upside and higher yields. (≈€2,250–€8,252/m²)
