Landlord Maintenance Obligations in Sweden
Understand a landlord's responsibility to maintain an apartment in Sweden. Learn about the 'lowest acceptable standard', periodic repairs, and tenant remedies.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
In Sweden, landlords bear a notably heavy burden when it comes to property maintenance. The legal framework views the provision of an apartment not just as renting space, but as a full-service agreement where the property owner assumes nearly all responsibility for continuous, scheduled upkeep.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Property maintenance disputes frequently end up in the Rent Tribunal. Consult a property management expert. Information last verified: March 2026.
The Mandate: "Fully Usable" and the "Lowest Acceptable Standard"
The Swedish Land Code dictates fundamental obligations. Upon move-in, the landlord must ensure the apartment is in such a condition that it is, according to the general perception of the local area, "fully usable for its intended purpose."
Furthermore, the Tenancy Act outlines the Lowest Acceptable Standard (Lägsta Godtagbara Standard) that a residential unit must unconditionally meet. This includes:
- Continuous, safe electricity and running water.
- Hot water and functioning drainage for hygiene.
- A shower and toilet located inside the apartment.
- Fixed heating equipment capable of maintaining an approved winter temperature (typically around 20°C in living areas, as mandated by the Public Health Agency).
- Reasonable access to storage, cooking facilities (stove, fridge, sink), and washing facilities (either in-unit appliances or a communal laundry room).
The Requirement for Periodic Maintenance
One of the largest distinctions between Swedish and foreign rental cultures is the landlord's obligation to perform routine cosmetic maintenance.
Time Intervals & Wear-and-Tear In Sweden, the landlord pays for normal wear and tear. The landlord is legally obligated to perform apartment maintenance at "reasonable time intervals." This customarily includes repainting walls, replacing wallpaper, and upgrading refrigerators, freezers, or countertops that—while perhaps still barely functional—are deemed aesthetically obsolete or worn out by age.
Legal precedent generally establishes that landlords should repaint or re-wallpaper an apartment every 10 to 15 years. (Tenants can sometimes negotiate for expedited cosmetic upgrades in exchange for a permanent, negotiated increase in their monthly rent).
Landlord Access and Inspections
A landlord cannot freely enter a tenant's apartment without warning. If an owner needs to perform non-emergency maintenance, standard inspections, or mandatory recurring checks (such as the OVK - Obligatory Ventilation Control), they must provide the tenant with formal notice several days or weeks in advance.
Immediate, unannounced entry (even via a locksmith) is strictly reserved for acute emergencies, such as massive water leaks, suspected fires, or gas issues threatening the building's structural integrity.
Tenant Remedies: Injunctions and Rent Escrow
What happens if a landlord ignores maintenance requests, fails to address black mold, or leaves a tenant without a functioning bathroom? Swedish tenants possess powerful legal tools:
- Rent Reduction: A tenant has a theoretical and practical right to a partial or full rent reduction for the period the apartment's utility value was diminished. (For example, rent can be reduced by up to 50–100% per day if a tenant is left without bathroom facilities during prolonged plumbing work).
- Rent Deposit with the County Board: A tenant can confidently withhold the disputed rent amount by depositing it directly with the County Administrative Board (Länsstyrelsen) while awaiting a tribunal ruling. This legally protects the tenant from being evicted for "unpaid rent."
- Injunction to Repair (Åtgärdsföreläggande): A tenant can apply to the Rent Tribunal to force action. If the landlord neglects blatant disrepair, the Tribunal will issue an injunction with a penalty fine (vite). The landlord must pay this substantial fine to the state for every week or month the property remains substandard in defiance of the order.
Track All Service Requests with Landager
In the Rent Tribunal, disputes often hinge on evidence: when was the request made, what was said, and how quickly did the landlord act? Landager integrates maintenance processing directly into its platform. All tenant repair requests are securely logged with time stamps, and your dispatches to electricians or plumbers are tracked centrally. With Landager, you generate an indisputable digital trail proving your prompt adherence to Swedish maintenance laws.
Back to Sweden Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
Sources & Official References
Är du redo att förenkla din uthyrningsverksamhet?
Gå med i tusentals oberoende hyresvärdar som har effektiviserat sin verksamhet med Landager.
