---
title: "Housing Agencies and Rental Queues in Sweden 2026: How They Work"
author: "Esther Asmundsson"
authorUrl: "https://bofrid.se/en/articles/authors/EstherAsmundsson"
datePublished: "2026-06-23T10:00:00.000Z"
dateModified: "2026-06-23T08:40:04Z"
description: "How Sweden's housing agencies, Boplats and rental queues work in 2026. Queue times, registration – and how to find a home with no queue at all."
categories: ["Guider", "Hyresgäst"]
canonical: "https://bofrid.se/en/articles/housing-agencies-rental-queues-sweden-2026"
language: "en"
---

# Housing Agencies and Rental Queues in Sweden 2026: How They Work

If you're looking for a rental in Sweden you'll quickly run into housing queues. The Stockholm Housing Agency, Boplats in Gothenburg and similar queues across the country allocate thousands of apartments – but queue times can be extreme. Here we explain how the system works in 2026 and how to find a home faster.

## What is a housing agency?

A housing agency is a (usually municipal) service that allocates rentals by queue time. You register, accumulate queue points (one per day) and can apply for available apartments. The applicant with the longest queue time who meets the requirements gets the offer.

The largest players:

| Agency | Area |
|---|---|
| Stockholm Housing Agency | Stockholm region |
| Boplats Göteborg | Greater Gothenburg |
| Boplats Sverige / municipal queues | Several municipalities |

## How to register

1. **Create an account** with the agency in your region.
2. **Start accumulating queue points** immediately – often you just need to be 18.
3. **Apply actively** to available listings; join the queue for the ones you want.
4. **Respond quickly** to offers, or you may lose your place.

A common mistake is delaying registration. Since queue time is everything, create an account as early as possible – even if you're not looking right now.

## Queue times can be long

In the big cities the queue time for an attractive rental can be many years – sometimes over a decade in central locations. This makes queues poorly suited to anyone who needs a home **now**: for a job move, studies or a new life situation.

## The alternative: a home with no queue

Not all rentals are allocated via a queue. **Private landlords** often rent out directly, with no queue system, assessing your suitability as a tenant instead. Here your [housing CV and Bostadsmerit](/en/articles/housing-cv-merit-guide-tenants) become decisive – a strong profile outweighs queue time.

On Bofrid you'll find homes from private landlords where you can apply directly. Read more in our guide to [renting an apartment without a queue](/en/articles/rent-an-apartment-without-a-queue-2026).

## Queues and first-hand contracts

Homes via an agency are nearly always **first-hand contracts** with full security of tenure – a major reassurance. Direct rentals from private landlords can be either first- or second-hand; always check the contract type. See [first-hand or second-hand](/en/articles/firsthand-or-secondhand-rental-contract-sweden).

## Frequently asked questions

**Does it cost to be in a housing queue?**
Most agencies charge a small annual fee. Some municipal queues are free.

**Can I be in several queues at once?**
Yes, and it's recommended. Register in all relevant queues to improve your chances.

**Do I lose my queue time if I decline?**
Declining an offer normally doesn't reset your queue time, but rules vary – read the terms.

## Summary

Housing agencies allocate rentals by queue time, which favours those who planned far ahead but rarely those who need a home quickly. Register early in several queues – and supplement with direct rentals from private landlords. [Search available rentals on Bofrid](/sok-bostad) and apply with no queue.