Germany · Where to Live

Eight cities,
honestly compared.

Rent in Munich costs 2.3× what it does in Dresden. Frankfurt has the best flights home; Berlin is the easiest city to live in English; the east is the value play. Real contract rents, real trade-offs — including the weather, which nobody moves to Germany for.

Last verified: 8 July 2026
The key numbers
  • New-lease asking rents (GREIX, Q3 2025): Munich €22.96/m² · Berlin €15.82/m² · Dresden €9.89/m² (Q2 2025)
  • Frankfurt: the best nonstop North America connections of any German airport
  • Small-town and rural rents: often half big-city rates — but German becomes essential
  • Sunshine: roughly 1,500–1,800 hours/year in most of Germany — the Algarve gets 3,000+

The cities, with real rents

Rents below are GREIX new-lease asking-rent data (Q3 2025 unless noted), per square metre cold rent — a large, hedonically-adjusted sample of listings across platforms, which tracks closely with signed rents but is not itself transaction data.

CityRentThe honest pitch
Berlin€15.82/m²The capital, and the easiest big German city to live in English. Culture, healthcare density, and every nationality on earth. Trade-off: a genuinely tight housing market — the rent brake keeps prices from exploding but makes apartments scarce.
Munich€22.96/m²Germany's most expensive city, and its most polished: the Alps an hour away, exceptional safety, dense healthcare. Trade-off: the hardest apartment hunt in the country, at the highest prices.
Hamburg€15.62/m²Maritime, wealthy, green — canals, the Elbe, more bridges than Venice. Understated in a way that suits people who found Berlin exhausting.
Frankfurt€17.55/m²The practical pick: Germany's intercontinental hub, with the best nonstop connections to the US and Canada. Banking city, compact, more international than its reputation. Trade-off: less charm per euro.
Cologne / Düsseldorf€15.21/m² / ~€14/m²Rhineland friendliness — the closest Germany gets to easy-going. Düsseldorf has a notable established international community. Both well-connected, neither overwhelming.
Stuttgart€16.11/m²Prosperous, hilly, engineering-wealthy. Surrounded by vineyards and the Swabian Alb. Trade-off: reserved local culture; the language helps here more than in Berlin.
Leipzig€10.22/m² (Q4 2025)The value pick with momentum: restored Gründerzeit architecture, a serious music tradition, and rents a third below Berlin. The east's success story.
Dresden€9.89/m² (Q2 2025)The cheapest rents on this list in one of Germany's most beautiful rebuilt cities. Trade-off: smaller international community; German matters more, sooner.

Small-town and rural Germany

Outside the big cities, rents can halve — and half of Germany's charm lives in its small towns. The honest caveats: English coverage drops fast, healthcare means driving to the district town, and integration without German isn't merely hard, it's impossible. If your plan is rural Bavaria on B1-someday German, spend a winter there on a long visit first.

The weather paragraph other sites skip

Germany is grey. Most of the country gets roughly 1,500–1,800 hours of sunshine a year — the Algarve gets over 3,000, Phoenix over 3,800. November to February is short, dark days under cloud, and it is the single most common complaint from North American arrivals. People move to Germany for family, culture, healthcare and connection. Nobody moves for the weather; make sure the rest of the case carries it.
In this section

Guides

Coming soon

Berlin for over-55 arrivals

Neighbourhoods that make sense past the nightlife years, healthcare access, and the apartment-hunt reality.

Coming soon

Leipzig and Dresden: the value east

What €1,000/month rents actually buy, the international-community question, and winter honesty.

Coming soon

Choosing by airport

Nonstop routes to the US and Canada from Frankfurt, Munich and Berlin — and what "one connection away" really costs annually.

Sources

  1. City rents — GREIX Rental Price Index (asking-rent index), Kiel Institute (Q2–Q4 2025): kielinstitut.de
  2. Sunshine hours — Deutscher Wetterdienst climate data: dwd.de; Algarve comparison per IPMA climate normals
  3. Population and city statistics — Destatis: destatis.de
Rent figures are city-level averages for new leases; individual neighbourhoods vary widely. Düsseldorf's figure is approximate pending the next GREIX city update.
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