American reacts to House Prices in Germany

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  • čas přidán 19. 10. 2023
  • Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to real estate house prices in Germany right now!
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Komentáře • 430

  • @Lichti82
    @Lichti82 Před 8 měsíci +204

    Same old joke: houses in the US are cheaper because you have to buy a new one after each thunderstorm 😅

    • @ryanwass
      @ryanwass  Před 8 měsíci +41

      Nooooo just a new roof!

    • @alidemirbas6566
      @alidemirbas6566 Před 8 měsíci +9

      ​@@ryanwass Yeah, but the house's location might be somewhere else, as you can see in the "Wizard of Oz". This fascinating documentary about American life has been shown in German schools for decades and is very popular with children.

    • @karingoerke7264
      @karingoerke7264 Před 7 měsíci +8

      What they call House wouldn't get called Gartenhaus in Germany, because they are built more strong and are isolated. American Houses like German "Schuppen" so, the Garage of the lawn mower 😂

    • @avysark2034
      @avysark2034 Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@karingoerke7264it should be said that houses can be built quite sturdy, even with 4x6 and that there are plenty of good builds, only that the focus there is more often than not on cheap and quick builds that'll last just long enough so the builder can't be sued anymore.
      On the other hand, Germany and Europe in general have probably plenty of other flaws in this field, which the US doesn't have and I'm saying that as someone who's no big fan of the latter.

    • @wisi4044
      @wisi4044 Před 7 měsíci +7

      ​@@ryanwasswe have houses older than america 🇨🇭

  • @stuborn-complaining-german
    @stuborn-complaining-german Před 8 měsíci +195

    The secon house doesn't actually exist yet. Those pictures are computer generated to get you to contact them. Then they will tell you that for the price quoted you actually only get a garden shed, and to get whats in the pictures you need to pay 1-2 Mil.. ..😆

    • @goodgame2064
      @goodgame2064 Před 8 měsíci +21

      Noo leave him in his imagination

    • @Trymon1980
      @Trymon1980 Před 8 měsíci +22

      Also this should be just the price for the house. You need also some land to build on

    • @rottenlettus
      @rottenlettus Před 8 měsíci +16

      Yep, the 2. one is probably just the foundation, floor, walls, roof, doors and windows. Maybe the Bathroom is included. For everything else you have to pay extra

    • @sandrasauerkraut8741
      @sandrasauerkraut8741 Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@rottenlettusI‘d bet a lot of money that bathrooms are NOT included. Probably not even the doors.

    • @mats7492
      @mats7492 Před 8 měsíci +4

      indeed. THAT house in berlin is over 1 million easily..

  • @eaglevision993
    @eaglevision993 Před 8 měsíci +115

    Regarding the first house on your list, "mit viel Potential" is real estate agent´s talk for "it will fall apart without a complete rebuilt."

    • @mats7492
      @mats7492 Před 8 měsíci +17

      "with lots of potential" means its a complete dump and you have invest at least another 100k in renovating it if not more

    • @hypatian9093
      @hypatian9093 Před 8 měsíci +7

      "Reparaturstau" is at least honest, but very euphemistic.

    • @eaglevision993
      @eaglevision993 Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@hypatian9093 Other great describtions of a dump are "Heimwerkertraum", "viel Platz für individuelle Ideen", "rustikales Ambiente", "leichter Reparaturstau", "Rohdiamant"...

  • @ThomasGanterPrien
    @ThomasGanterPrien Před 8 měsíci +29

    Our house was built in the 70s.
    The 1770s ... 😊

  • @slack84
    @slack84 Před 8 měsíci +76

    You wondered how durable german roofs are, so here's a good example for you: My parents house was built in 1898 and we bought it in the early 90's and back then the roof was in good shape, still got all the original woodwork just a few tiles needed to be replaced. but my dad knew he would at some point need to renovate the whole roof as the woodwork was a hundred years old. in 2017 then a huge storm damaged part of the roof and we had carpenters there to check what exactly needs to be renewed. Turns out almost all of the original Woodworks was still in a really good shape (back in the 19th century they used massive oak beams and trusses to ensure the roof would endure a long time) so just a few oak beams/trusses needed to be replaced where the storm struck, that and a few new tiles and we were good to go.
    So with good maintenance a well built German roof could last for over 100 years.

    • @hypatian9093
      @hypatian9093 Před 8 měsíci +7

      The house I live in got new tiles + insulation under it for its 100th birthday some years ago. The roof framework needed no work and should be good for the next decades :)

  • @sabinereimer7809
    @sabinereimer7809 Před 8 měsíci +76

    Houses in Germany are mostly really build like the people want them... because if you can afford to build a house you assume to live in there for the rest of your life!
    Most of these are build out of cinderblock with concrete. The rooms have doors that you can regulate the heat in every room individually. The room you were thinking as a garage was a basement with a heating system (the big red thing).😊

    • @BlueFlash215
      @BlueFlash215 Před 8 měsíci +3

      This isn't that common anymore. It was until a decade ago. Now "Fertighäuser", partial pre-built homes, are on the rise as a cheap alternative.
      You can customize them a little, depending on what type you go for. Basically you can fit different types of rooms into the square they give you as an outer wall.

  • @spanishcrab
    @spanishcrab Před 8 měsíci +62

    If you think those prices are expensive, try to look for Munich prices

    • @lulaa123
      @lulaa123 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Yeah he really should do that. I just looked up houses in Munich and they basically start at a million

    • @mats7492
      @mats7492 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Or Hamburg..
      they dont even start under 1.5 million!

    • @ririri88
      @ririri88 Před 7 měsíci +1

      You have to inherit a fortune or be a russian oligarch 😂 or both.

  • @caroline6544
    @caroline6544 Před 8 měsíci +123

    I am so fascinated that you cannot recognize a regular (maybe more modern designed) Ceiling lamp. 😂I really wonder now what lights in the US look like. But I really like this format. Please do this more often! And maybe also look at some flats; this shows better how most people live in cities. There is a huge range.

    • @101steel4
      @101steel4 Před 8 měsíci +3

      They all seem to have the same.
      Tiny round globe thing, or those ghastly ceiling fans.

    • @caroline6544
      @caroline6544 Před 8 měsíci

      Thats kinda boring.😂 It must be a sad place for product or furniture designers@@101steel4

    • @AHVENAN
      @AHVENAN Před 8 měsíci +2

      Ceiling fans are, from what I understand extremely common in the US, I've heard some people say they have one in basically every room except maybe the bathroom and entrance hall

    • @101steel4
      @101steel4 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@AHVENAN yes they love them.
      I can't stand them personally.
      They remind me of 1970s Asian homes.

    • @Herzschreiber
      @Herzschreiber Před 8 měsíci

      haha same here. I guess it is because of this somehow old fashioned style (70ies maybe?). Or do Americans really not have any long ceiling lamps hanging above their dinner tables?

  • @eaglevision993
    @eaglevision993 Před 8 měsíci +134

    My grampa built my current home in the early 80s. I still have the original bills from the contractors which total around 200.000 DM (roughly 100.000 Euro, without inflation).
    After an addition and extensive renovation it was valued at 1.4 million from by the insurance company last year. Prices are all over the place.

    • @denzzlinga
      @denzzlinga Před 8 měsíci +8

      The same with land values. My great grandparents got a small field as present from their aunt when they married in the late 30s, and today it´s a worth well over 1 million (+ the house). The village was a total "Kuhkaff" back then, with no infrastructure and almost farmers only living there. Today it´s more or less a suburb of a big city with more than 5 times more people living there, and all theese old farmer´s properties in the middle of the village are worth a ton of money.

    • @hypatian9093
      @hypatian9093 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Depends on the area and how well you did with maintenance/repairs. Small town in Northern Germany - a house in our street was torn down two years ago because nobody wanted to buy it due to "Reparaturstau". Now the owners hope that the plot itself will sell better... well... now we regularly have half a dozen sheep as neighbours that do a bit of lawn maintenance ;)

    • @denzzlinga
      @denzzlinga Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@hypatian9093 i´d buy it, for the children or grandchildren.

    • @jellysquiddles3194
      @jellysquiddles3194 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@hypatian9093The annoying thing is that people are so dillusional they think people can pay half a million for a crappy property in bad location, when they got it for 1/10th of the price (which was already a lot).

    • @robopecha
      @robopecha Před 8 měsíci +1

      basically the other way round for my parents. they spent around a million in the early 80s on building the house they wanted and sold it a few years ago for 350.000€, because no one was willing to pay more. its a great and unique house with super expensive materials from all over the world, but in a shitty small town.

  • @TobiasTimpe
    @TobiasTimpe Před 8 měsíci +30

    „My house is old. It was built in the …“ - Why was I expecting him to say 80s or 90s? 😀

    • @uliwehner
      @uliwehner Před 8 měsíci

      same here. My house here in Georgia is "old" it was built in the 70s. It is very typical to buy houses like mine, which sits on 2 acres (8000m2) in the woods, completely gut the interior, rip out walls, convert to more open floor plan, add more bathrooms, etc. i have a 5 bedroom house with 2.5 bathrooms. Modern houses would have a bathroom per bedroom. So i would end up with say 4 bedrooms and 4 bathrooms. This is a 10 room house btw. 3500 square foot. i bought it for a little over 200k 20 years ago, right now it is valued over 400k.

  • @sudarshandahal2144
    @sudarshandahal2144 Před 8 měsíci +44

    400k for a house, almost anywhere in germany is considered incredible price. Also we use . instead of commas for thousands. So 2.400 was 2.4K as the rent of the whole house without utilities.

    • @hannessteffenhagen61
      @hannessteffenhagen61 Před 7 měsíci +3

      400k around where I live is doable, but any less than that is probably a scam.

  • @MaryRaine929
    @MaryRaine929 Před 8 měsíci +97

    There are different kinds of problems with buying/building houses in Germany:
    1. We have much less space than in the US. Building land is rare, small and expensive (what often leads to the beachtowel garden😆).
    2. Existing houses are often owned by older people, who built a big house for their children, that moved out a long time ago. Now they still live there alone or as a couple, which is totally legit, but at the same time families with more than one child often have a hard time finding an adequate place to live. Same problem with renting.
    3. Speculation of course. 🙄

    • @manub.3847
      @manub.3847 Před 8 měsíci +10

      Additions:
      1) By today's standards, almost 700 square meters is already generous in some areas, as individual houses sometimes stand on almost 300 square meters of land.
      2) Especially at retirement age, it is often a difficult decision: you often only pay the additional costs (insurance, property tax, energy costs, etc.) which you can cover from your pension and in this way try to maintain an inheritance for your children/grandchildren.
      And selling to move into a rental apartment or smaller condo sometimes involves higher costs.
      Example: House without energy renovation sold for €380,000 -> new apartment with amenities within walking distance (shopping, doctors, etc.) may then cost more than you got for your house, since senior-friendly access and bathrooms as well as new energy standards are already met. (or still have to be installed by you)
      Pensioners often pay less in rented apartments because they have been tenants for decades and cannot financially afford to "exchange" the large 4-room apartment for a smaller 2-room apartment because they would then pay a higher rent.

    • @eaglevision993
      @eaglevision993 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Yeah, like my neighbors. They had 2 children and one of their parents lived with them in a nice 4000 sqft home. Now there´s just the 2 of them and they basically use 3 rooms.

    • @Leenapanther
      @Leenapanther Před 7 měsíci

      A Germany has a lot of space to build houses compared to Switzerland. Single family houses get replaced with six apartment buildings.

    • @Lisa-xn9xc
      @Lisa-xn9xc Před 7 měsíci

      If you want to buy a house in a village you will have no problem to find something big (it would be harder to find something small). It's a problem when you want to rent something. When the old people die and their children get the house, it's not worth the effort to rent it - they would have to divide the rent by multiple heirs, one of them would have to take care of the renters, there would always be discussions about what to repair, how to do it and so on. Plus you could have problems with 'Mietnomanden' - people who don't pay the rent, destroy things and live there for a year until you can force them to leave and then they do the same thing in the next house. It's easier to sell it.

    • @cantinadudes
      @cantinadudes Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@Lisa-xn9xcyou can force people out after a month not a year

  • @analholes77
    @analholes77 Před 8 měsíci +50

    The one in Marburg was on a quite big land area around 7500 square foot. It was actually a very good deal. Marburg is still in commuting distance to Frankfurt and Rhine/Main area, where you pay double for that easily.

    • @mrjohnosterman
      @mrjohnosterman Před 7 měsíci +2

      Von Marburg nach Frankfurt pendeln ist aber eigentlich pervers... Zug und Auto jeweils ne Stunde ein Weg.
      Ich hab's zwei Jahre lang gemacht und würde es nie mehr tun.

    • @biancaj.d.148
      @biancaj.d.148 Před 7 měsíci

      @@mrjohnosterman Nur wenn alles wie geplant fährt... Ich habe von Butzbach aus nach Niederwalgern regelmäßig drei Stunden oder länger gebraucht, weil die Strecke ständig ein anderes Problem hat...

    • @mrjohnosterman
      @mrjohnosterman Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@biancaj.d.148 Ja das kommt ja noch dazu… mich hat das gewarte und die Ausfälle usw irgendwann nur noch krank gemacht

  • @1337Arnonym
    @1337Arnonym Před 8 měsíci +61

    You have to take in consideration the 3 most important factors which dertermine the price:
    1. location
    2. location
    and not forget about:
    3. location
    In rural areas you can buy a 150 qm 2 story house (2-4 bedrooms, 1-2 bathrooms and a 600-900 qm yard) for 200.000 - 350.000 €. Same price which only will get you a 1-2 room apartement in a big city (i.e. munich, hamburg, berlin).

    • @fgregerfeaxcwfeffece
      @fgregerfeaxcwfeffece Před 8 měsíci +4

      I think infrastructure might be 3 in some occasions. But that's arguably part of location.
      And if you go REALLY rural you can even go below 100k. But then there is no discussion, you need a car. For everything. (Including picking up packages left with a neighbor in some cases.)

    • @steemlenn8797
      @steemlenn8797 Před 8 měsíci +4

      In an East German 30K town you can buy 4 or 6 family houses for 200-300K. Of course those houses are a bit older and the last deep renovation was probably in the late 90s. But it's not like it's hard to live in them.
      Or a "Bungalow with lots of potential" for under 100K.

    • @MyvIsLove2
      @MyvIsLove2 Před 8 měsíci +3

      how tho? my 64m² apartment was 130k already and I live in the smallest town

    • @jackydoucet9037
      @jackydoucet9037 Před 8 měsíci

      With regard to rural areas it really depends where the rural is located. For instance in the South West of Germany, you'll easily pay 300 k only for the land itself. So the entire house will not cost less than 500-600 k in the cheapest version.

    • @sungi7814
      @sungi7814 Před 8 měsíci +2

      In Bayern ist es nirgendwo rural genug dass das ausreicht.

  • @elsapain4172
    @elsapain4172 Před 8 měsíci +13

    Pls watch a episode of "die Schnäppchenhäuser" XD its about "normal" german people buying cheap houses and then re-buildiing most of it on there own. And if i remember right, there was often familie/people too that bought absolut ruins and needed then to move in cause they already quit there old homes(so has trash tv also a bit in it^^)

  • @Attirbful
    @Attirbful Před 8 měsíci +27

    Note also, that in Germany, there is no mandatory home owner‘s association membership as in the U.S. There are home owner‘s associations that you can voluntarily become a member of and they advise you in legal questions, but there is no neighborhood gang that can ask you to trim your lawn or adhere to certain neighborhood standards. We have government agencies for that (such as restricting the shape or style a house being built in an already existing neighborhood so as to keep a historical or local appearance of an entire neighborhood intact, or what color you can paint your house etc.)

    • @snowjaeger6113
      @snowjaeger6113 Před 8 měsíci

      If you own an apartment, then you definitely need to become a member of the home owners association of the building/property… but this homeowner associations are set-up completely differently.
      Also, town houses are also often organized in homeowner associations, where central heating or communal gardens exist, or other community owned installations, like a common roof.

    • @Attirbful
      @Attirbful Před 8 měsíci

      @@snowjaeger6113 Yeah, as I never owned an apartment or a house in the U.S. but only rented, I do not know much about these associations. I am very interested in American architecture though and in particular historical homes and follow a Facebook group on historical houses on the market as well as other realty-related groups and there first encountered the concept of them. Here in Germany, I currently own two houses and, as said, we do not have these associations with a mandated membership and regular contributions… Here, communal property is taken care of by the municipal agencies and paid for via taxes, for home owners in particular the “Grundsteuer.“ From these, things such as street upkeep, street lighting, snow service on the streets, the canalization upkeep etc. are paid for.

    • @snowjaeger6113
      @snowjaeger6113 Před 7 měsíci

      @@Attirbfulby communal I don’t mean city or country property. Often multiple townhouses share a single roof or central heating with their neighbors. Particularly often I ran across this in lower Germany. So if you own such a town house in Germany you need to pay into the HOA (ETG) for maintenance and renovations.
      HOAs 🏡 in the USA 🇺🇸 however have a very different mission and rights than ETGs 🏡 in Germany 🇩🇪

    • @Attirbful
      @Attirbful Před 7 měsíci

      @@snowjaeger6113 As far as I know, however, in the U.S. the HOA can go as far as dictating certain measures to unattached houses, entire neighborhoods so to speak as well as ask for mandatory contributions to neighborhood watches, for example. I‘ll have to do some research on this…

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey3882 Před 8 měsíci +10

    "My house is old. It was built in the 30s", he says. My closest friend's family home was built in 1430s, but has had some additions since, most recently around 1880s. As in the US, some cities are more expensive in Germany, notably München and Frankfurt. In Munich, a 4-bed house in the suburbs is around €1.7 million. With a decently large yard in an upper-middle class neighbourhood, it is more like €3 to €3.5 million.

  • @Snapatmung
    @Snapatmung Před 8 měsíci +14

    we try to keep the doors shut for energy efficiency reasons, to keep rooms heated.

    • @QuikkNic
      @QuikkNic Před 8 měsíci

      Yeah, that’ll save us 🎉

    • @Snapatmung
      @Snapatmung Před 8 měsíci +7

      @@QuikkNic 1. its about saving money for me and my family
      2. that attitude does not save anyone but you

    • @wolfgangpreier9160
      @wolfgangpreier9160 Před 8 měsíci

      And open all windows the whole day to "LÜFTEN"!

  • @JHenry-wv1xv
    @JHenry-wv1xv Před 8 měsíci +33

    The cheapest houses are still in rural eastern Germany. Not so many anymore, but still a few exceptional properties. Mine cost just under $20,000, very much in need of renovation but habitable, 650sqft of living space, 1500sqft of outbuildings (garages, sheds and a gymnasium that looks like an old brick church without a steeple), 10,000sqft of land (overgrown sports field framed by old trees).
    Actually I was looking for a 2 bedroom apartment, but that was cheaper calculated on 10 years.

    • @lmchron9343
      @lmchron9343 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Never seen a house for under 100k in germany. 20k sounds like ur trolling

    • @klarasee806
      @klarasee806 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Must be in VERY rural eastern Germany, without okayish internet, next doctor about 50km away, no school, no kindergarten, very poor infrastructure in general, very much in need of renovation, very old oil heating (if any heating at all), very poor insulation (> high energy costs)… okay, maybe, if you are very „lucky“.
      I have once looked for something like that, just out of curiosity, but the cheapest houses I found back then were WAYYYYY more than 20.000 €, and in most cases only somewhat habitable after renovation.

    • @eaglevision993
      @eaglevision993 Před 8 měsíci

      @@lmchron9343 In rural parts of the former GDR territory you can very well find a home for 20k. Even less.
      But it will be in need of a full renovation or better yet teardown and rebuild.
      The land there is cheap and a crappy house on it actually depreciates the value of the lot since most of them are inhabitable.

    • @blatterrascheln2267
      @blatterrascheln2267 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@lmchron9343Can happen, my parents house went with around 75.000, but without any surrounding property in the middle of a village, no garden, no anything, with expecting major renovations in electrics and with a floor plan not suitable for modern times, only a coal-cellar and a half-usable attic, all around 160 m2. It was an inhabitable home but no fun if you want something modern and open with connected rooms and maybe two bathrooms or something. When sold, they basically build a whole new inside and crammed 4 apartments inside :(

    • @hannessteffenhagen61
      @hannessteffenhagen61 Před 7 měsíci

      20k? The ruins of a medieval barn in the middle of a swamp don’t count. Anything within commuting distance of a place that has running water and jobs starts at 200k, and more like 300-500 including renovation costs.

  • @Briefstuder
    @Briefstuder Před 8 měsíci +8

    Marburg is a town with a pretty big University so it’s more expensive to live there than in a „normal“ town in the countryside.

  • @fraumeh
    @fraumeh Před 8 měsíci +15

    Most of the pictures with the neat looking, modern houses were "fake", they are just advertising how you could build a house with that offer - and the prices of these "still to built"-houses often seem cheap, but it's just the "Rohbau", like the walls, basic floors, windows, doors, pipes and electricity - no installed lights, no real floor, no wallpaper, obviously no kitchen...so you still have to invest a lot more.
    And you have to keep in mind that there is a huge variety of different houses in Germany, as they come from many different decades...you have cute, crooked "Fachwerkhäuser" that you have to keep in a certain state because they are registered medieval monuments and you can't modernize them too much, you have quite beautiful old houses that look very fancy from the outside but are shabby inside because they need modernization, you have very ugly concrete buildings from after WWII, where they just tried to fill in the gaps left by bombs, and you have fancy designer-houses that no normal person can ever afford, sometimes with very special but not very practical features (like an open sleeping space on a gallery above the living room, or beautiful but dangerous stairways.)
    Plus, the prices even in the rural areas of some parts are insane, espacially as you have to invest a lot nowadays to modernize the heating system and install solar panels to "survive" the rising energy costs.

  • @xxx_phantom_xxxw_t_a9479
    @xxx_phantom_xxxw_t_a9479 Před 8 měsíci +7

    Hello from Switzerland, I think in Germany it is similar to ours, the prices fluctuate significantly depending on the area in which you are looking for something. Berlin is probably at the top when it comes to property prices, which means that the house on it quickly becomes irrelevant because the land alone costs a fortune. In Zurich, one m2 of building land costs on average around 3,400 CHF (approx. 3,600 EUR).

  • @McGhinch
    @McGhinch Před 8 měsíci +18

    While Marburg seems to be a small city, it has a good university. It also is the home of the Marburger Bund, a union of employed doctors. Many people in Marburg are not on the poorer side of life. (This is a very abbreviated statement -- for more colors investigate yourself.)

    • @hypatian9093
      @hypatian9093 Před 8 měsíci

      Yes, houses + apartments even in smaller cities are expensive if there's a university.

    • @juliaclaire42
      @juliaclaire42 Před 8 měsíci

      He was good at picking cities with universities. Bamberg also has a good one.

    • @McGhinch
      @McGhinch Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@juliaclaire42He is, but I wouldn't want that house. It is out in the middle of almost nowhere. You need a car for shopping. There is no grocer and just one restaurant (pizzeria) there. And with our freak weather you first must make the boiler room water proof -- the Baunach (the little creek) might come calling.

    • @ursschnatterfleck6019
      @ursschnatterfleck6019 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I ❤ Marburg! Pretty town with nice people.

  • @tarik2021
    @tarik2021 Před 8 měsíci +13

    1. The location of the house is a main factor of how much it costs.
    2. You forgot to put a Yard in the costs. A house which has 140m2 livingspace doesn´t cost 500k, but a house with 140m2 livingspace and a complete size(Grundstück) of 500m2 does cost that much. "Grundstück" means the complete size of the yard and house (1,2,3,...floor and cellar doesn´t count towards it). It get´s measured like there would be no house. In some places in Austria only the "Grundstück" can cost with ~700m2 from 50-200k in the country and up to 1.3mill. in a city, in the Capital a 945m2 "Grundstück" costs 3mil. (3.400$/m2) and that´s not even that much found even one which costs +4.000$/m2.
    3. Our houses aren´t hounted we would call the police and sue them for "Lärmbelestigung nach ruhezeiten" and/or "Sachbeschädigung".

    • @manub.3847
      @manub.3847 Před 8 měsíci

      b) Not to forget that he perceived the “advertising” for a “basic house” without land as a cheap price. It's good if you have (inherited) a property and can do all the interior work yourself, including the bathroom and heating. Otherwise the house would cost at least twice as much + land.
      Here in our town (Northern Germany) the square meter of building land costs €650 and in the next small town it costs “only” €500 per square meter. The joke is that in the next small town there are a few apartment blocks with 14 or 15 floors and more rented units, which push the purchase prices down a bit. Otherwise you can say that today you pay around 4 times the original purchase price for a house from the 1980s/1990s.

  • @KatieLeary
    @KatieLeary Před 8 měsíci +9

    You got to see a bit of the housing crisis that Germany is currently facing. There are very few (affordable) houses in desirable areas available. My partner and I both earn decent salaries, but we wouldn't be able to afford a house where we are currently living -- maybe in very rural areas we could but then we would have a harder time finding a well-paying job there. Most people under the age of 40 who own houses have inherited the house from their family or received a lot of money from an inheritance to buy their own house.

  • @klaus.kinsky3954
    @klaus.kinsky3954 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I recommend the Drachenschanze in Altschauerberg. But the house itself is only recommended for demolition 😂

  • @uliwehner
    @uliwehner Před 8 měsíci +4

    that was funny, my wife just asked my last night if we could move back to Germany and specifically to Bamberg. Bamberg is really pretty and "historic". I was born about an hours drive from there.

  • @jacki_00
    @jacki_00 Před 8 měsíci +9

    Love your videos! I'm from Germany and it's very interesting what you think about it. Also you make me laugh a lot.😂 Thank you!
    11:40 it's not even that tiny for German gardens and I think it has a huge backyard because the property has 695m²
    13:28 actually it's kinda cheap 😂
    21:20 All houses are different here. So for me non of these houses were odd but I understand that it is for you

  • @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl
    @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl Před 8 měsíci +2

    The town of Marburg has a quite popular university. Marburg being quite old has a very nice old town at its centre at the river Lahn attracting quite a number of tourists. The address appeared to me as being a bit outside of Marburg, maybe some little village or just a couple of farms.

  • @Fenster134
    @Fenster134 Před 8 měsíci +5

    I'm living in a half-timbered house built around 1436. It's pretty exciting what you can find when renovating such a house.

    • @hypatian9093
      @hypatian9093 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Even in younger houses. The one I live in was built a bit over a hundred years ago and they used sheets of the local newspaper as lining paper (Makulatur) - when we tore down the layers of old wallpaper and discovered that, we spent hours with reading the old newspaper :)

    • @lemmi1320
      @lemmi1320 Před 8 měsíci

      Can an American imagine that there are still inhabited houses that were built before the discovery of America? ;-)

  • @sandrasauerkraut8741
    @sandrasauerkraut8741 Před 8 měsíci +2

    „It‘s only 2 dollars and 40 cents, folks!“ 😂

  • @McGhinch
    @McGhinch Před 8 měsíci +3

    The last house you looked at was probably built according to older regulations. In many places you have a plat/development plan. Often you could only use a certain percentage of the premises to build the house. Also, the number of floors was often limited. I suspect it allowed for 2 1/2 floors, that is why the top floor is low-ceilinged. But, it has two garages. They are probably small, compared to newer ones. Anyhow, the don't show them so we don't know.
    Older buildings usually have small kitchens and bathrooms. The floor plan is by far less open.
    The room with that strange red thing is the boiler room.
    The room with the chandelier is a lobby on second floor -- you enter that from the staircase.
    The bedroom with the mannequin is probably a lady's room, living alone for a long time or had a very forgiving husband.
    The house is solidly built. By looking at it, I suspect red-brick. The stairs and floors look like man-made stone -- fashionable in the 1950s and 1960s. This house is more solid than most houses built in the US. It is also more sound proof inside the house than "all" houses in the US.

  • @laurafelicis1895
    @laurafelicis1895 Před 8 měsíci

    An hour ago, you couldn't have told me that this video concept would be this interesting to me. But I loved every minute haha I just love looking at houses!

  • @123batina
    @123batina Před 8 měsíci +4

    In europe houses can be really expencive depending on location. There is no rule you need to build a house anywhere. If you can build a 4 story building that land instead of the run down house occupying the plot - it is worth millions.

  • @e0n2006
    @e0n2006 Před 8 měsíci +2

    This Bathtub thingy can you get at IKEA for like 15 bucks

  • @alwynemcintyre2184
    @alwynemcintyre2184 Před 8 měsíci +1

    In Australia most new houses are pretty big on small blocks, usually 4 bedrooms with 2 car garage. From the rear of the house to the boundary fence is about 10 feet, same at the front, sides of the house to the boundary fences is 3 feet.

  • @Edtopia_upcycling_
    @Edtopia_upcycling_ Před 8 měsíci +2

    18:59 The red thing is an central heating. is powered by heating oil ( diesel) or natural gas.

  • @hobbyamixd6801
    @hobbyamixd6801 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I bought my house 10 years ago, so the prices were still ok. 130000€ for 120m2 and 640m2 plot. Year of construction 1989, but newly renovated including kitchen and garden shed

  • @julianegner5997
    @julianegner5997 Před 8 měsíci +2

    For any price you find, you have to add 10% for "purchase cost" & taxes

  • @franhunne8929
    @franhunne8929 Před 8 měsíci +1

    mieten - to rent - Haus mieten - to rent a house
    216 $ per square foot - but that also includes a town with public transport (though the ticket costs extra, of course), with less danger of black outs, as the electricity cables are buried, water that is potable, and - what you do not know - Marburg may be a small town, it still has a quite renowned university which dates from 1527. That is older than your country.

  • @k.reimann966
    @k.reimann966 Před 7 měsíci +1

    The first house with a typical broker saying.
    "Bungalow mit viel Potential" “Bungalow with a lot of potential”.
    Translated, that means: “A total hovel that would actually have to be torn down and rebuilt.”😂

  • @stuborn-complaining-german
    @stuborn-complaining-german Před 8 měsíci +1

    For reference take a look at some houses in the Munich or Hamburg area.

  • @Rick2010100
    @Rick2010100 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Good houses are usually only a few days online, or the real estate agent sells them quickly to people on his list with people who look for a house. The houses on the oline portals are mostly overpriced and no one will buy them. The new design houses are mostly CAD design examples or Musterhäuser wich are model homes. The model homes show a type of house wich the construction company offers for a certain price, they are real and no paper mache. When the construction company changes their house design after a few years, they build new and sell the model houses.

  • @junkfoodvegan6198
    @junkfoodvegan6198 Před 8 měsíci +5

    There are a lot of newer houses in Germany... well I'd guess a lot of the houses from before the 50's might have been destroyed in a particular event, I'd you know what I mean 😉

  • @philippkern9031
    @philippkern9031 Před 8 měsíci

    19:10 that's an storage room combined with the heating room. The red thing is the central heating unit.
    21:03 it is the classic plastered brick i'd guess.

  • @KicKandRoll666
    @KicKandRoll666 Před 8 měsíci

    the second house you are looking at, looks so nice because it is only a marketing prospect how a buidl hous can be like. it does not come furnished, it is not even build, they wanna give you a contract to build a house like that. Costs always explode while building and not only does it not come furnished but for everyting you have to probaly pay extra, like having a real floor and not just some raw concrete. if someone really wanna get a useable house with everythign expect furnishing (and kitchen, they are always seperate in germany), i expect the cost to be 50% higher

  • @Frahamen
    @Frahamen Před 8 měsíci +2

    Neighbors usually don't care about what's in someone else's garden. Although they might have an issue if you use toxins to a job you can easily do with your hands.

  • @florianscholl1256
    @florianscholl1256 Před 7 měsíci

    In the last house, the red thing, is the boiler/heating Room.

  • @MerYeM-gc5me
    @MerYeM-gc5me Před 8 měsíci +4

    thank you for yet another good video 😊 for buying a house here in germany you basically also always can add ~10% of the price on top for different fees. This of course always depends on different factors but it's a little rule of thumb. Berlin is also one of the most expensive areas. Just like every major city in many many countries at the moment

    • @Psi-Storm
      @Psi-Storm Před 8 měsíci +4

      Berlin probably doesn't even make the top 5 of most expensive cities. Munich, Hamburg and Frankfurt are definitely more expensive. And then we have Cologne, Düsseldorf or even smaller ones like Heidelberg that are really expensive.

    • @d-i-wood8499
      @d-i-wood8499 Před 8 měsíci +1

      And keep in mind that the furniture is almost never included. The kitchen is not included either. Sometimes you can buy it from the owner (additional costs), sometimes you have to buy a new one.

    • @klarasee806
      @klarasee806 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Berlin - if not Tiergarten or Zehlendorf or the like - is not that expensive compared to a lot of other German regions.
      Although Tiergarten belongs to the most expensive areas in Germany, it‘s way easier to find a reasonable priced home somewhere in Berlin than somewhere in Munich or Hamburg.

  • @matthiasnieuwenhuisen7181
    @matthiasnieuwenhuisen7181 Před 8 měsíci

    18:54 It's the utility room and the red thing is the heating. Probably in the basement or partially underground.

  • @carinad.3679
    @carinad.3679 Před 8 měsíci +2

    "I find it fascinating what Americans think about German houses. The second house, which appears to be so affordable, is actually a showcase home. This means it doesn't exist in this exact form. It's just an example of how the interior could be designed. When you buy this house, you're only purchasing the shell, without the land, which must be bought separately. As you've noticed, Berlin is very expensive."

  • @Anson_AKB
    @Anson_AKB Před 8 měsíci

    for quick rough estimates you can round area measurements: 1 squaremeter is 10.76 squarefeet, thus rounded between 10 and 11, or yet even quicker: add a zero to the area, eg 450 -> 4850, rounded 4500
    and the same rounding can be done for prices when 1€=1.06$ ... 450k € -> 477k $, rounded 450k $
    and when area as well as price are rounded, the error is even smaller, eg 450k€/450m2 = 477k$/4850ft2

  • @Falk4J
    @Falk4J Před 8 měsíci +3

    Our houses come in all materials, sizes and ages. We have houses that are even several hundred years old made of a wooden structure with clay-straw mixed walls. Most houses are made of bricks or the more modern ones of concrete or concrete blocks. Wooden houses are a rare sight to behold though.

    • @Gokudo87
      @Gokudo87 Před 8 měsíci

      With old houses "Denkmalschutz" might be something to consider, that foreigners might not be aware of.
      So if you buy one of those really old houses with clay walls, you will be limited to what renovations you can do. There are regulations what types of windows you are allowed to use for example. It's to preserve the original look of the house. That's why to US citizens German cities often look like out of a fairytale with the old houses.

  • @marcusfranconium3392
    @marcusfranconium3392 Před 8 měsíci +2

    You should watch some of the real estate sites in europe , There is significant price difference between nations and regions .

  • @anunearthlychild8569
    @anunearthlychild8569 Před 7 měsíci

    The room with the big red thing was probably either the basement or the boiler room. That was the big red thing - the heating system.
    😉
    If the room is so large, it is usually also used as a laundry room and storage room.
    When it comes to costs, you forget that Germany is small and land prices can be very high for building land, depending on the area. For example, the purchase price for a sqm of building land in Berlin can be around 1000 euros, in Munich you can expect three times that.
    So you would pay almost 2 million euros for the 695 square meters (like in Marburg) in Munich, WITHOUT a house on it.

  • @Muriel_Naumann
    @Muriel_Naumann Před 7 měsíci

    Marburg an der Lahn is a smaller town with a university in Hessen. It has a castle, a famos early gothic church and a beautiful historic centre.

  • @alteisenfahrer
    @alteisenfahrer Před 7 měsíci

    m< house is built in 1663 and big and wonderful, and it was cheap because it needed complete renovation which I am doing myself since aboit 5 years now

  • @madscientist8286
    @madscientist8286 Před 7 měsíci

    @01:35 I laughed so hard because you are spilling out them facts that we don't dare to state!

  • @JoSchn
    @JoSchn Před 7 měsíci

    13:29
    Marburg is a so called Student City.
    There is a Castle (Burg) on top of a Hill, the landcape is wonderfull. Very high living quality compared to Berlin / Hamburg / Cologne. Nice Landscape!

  • @grmpflz
    @grmpflz Před 6 měsíci

    Ground Floor and 1st floor of our house in Bavaria are from 1650 and still are in a good shape. Only the roof had to be changed once in 1980... . The house is built from field stones and mortar, without a cellar.

  • @nettcologne9186
    @nettcologne9186 Před 8 měsíci +3

    -Houses have basements in Germany..lol
    -When you cook (and Germans cook every day), the whole house smells like food. That's why many Germans like a kitchen with doors. But the trend is towards having an open kitchen to the living room/dining room.

    • @reinhard8053
      @reinhard8053 Před 8 měsíci

      Basements were normal but not so in new houses. Many like to spare the money if it is already tight. You need everything else but a basement can be omitted. Not a good trend in my opinion.

    • @hypatian9093
      @hypatian9093 Před 8 měsíci

      @@reinhard8053 Yeah, basements have lots of benefits. Lots of storage room, which means the floorplan of the house can be smaller (=cheaper). And you can have an utility room there (for the washing machine or freezer) and a hobbyroom. Or a guest room - which you can use yourself during heat waves in summer ;)

  • @hannah-wj9ot
    @hannah-wj9ot Před 7 měsíci

    It really depends on where you want to live and how popular the area is. My brother and sister in law owned an apartment with a garden but wanted a bigger living space (it was ok as long as the kids were younger) and got their house (or half of a semi detached house) because their neighbours were planning to move to northern Germany and knew my brother was looking. So they sold their apartment to a family with a teenage daughter and bought the place next door . All without these places ever making it on a website or hiring an estate agent. It was all mouth to mouth , a friend knows someone who's family member is looking kind of deal. Of course it sucks if you have to move to a new city and don't have this kind of connections.

  • @friendlyreptile9931
    @friendlyreptile9931 Před 8 měsíci +2

    81k residents is not a small town for german standards :D

  • @McGhinch
    @McGhinch Před 8 měsíci +1

    The house in Marburg: applying the same construction standards, how much would it cost in the US?

  • @impazzita82
    @impazzita82 Před 8 měsíci

    That was so much fun. I´d like another episode like this :)

  • @G2.Eirena
    @G2.Eirena Před 7 měsíci

    that big room was the heater-room and the red thing was a central heating.

  • @arwedbeck9527
    @arwedbeck9527 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Its allways funny to watch your videos but sometimes i think you need a german guide on your side xD maybe it will even funnier if you had someone to explain something to you...

  • @ALetsPlay
    @ALetsPlay Před 7 měsíci

    Funny how you looked for homes near Bamberg where I was born.
    The problem with Bamberg is: there are just 80000 inhabitants, but it is a city with university. Also there are with Erlangen and Nürnberg two other cities which also have a university. All cities can be reached easily by train. So houses and flats in these cities are extremly expensive as there are a lot of people who are interested in them (especially students and workers).

  • @GeschichtenUndGedanken
    @GeschichtenUndGedanken Před 8 měsíci

    Right. It depends on where and why. At the moment you would need to invest a lot. Just don’t rush it too much. “Furnished” means you will have into consideration that some houses will rip a hole into your pockets and things like that will make you think “why didn’t we think about it later. Are there schools for the kids, will you rent it as a kind of investment, how are you planning to go to your job, are there opportunities to work out? Things like that. Real estate agents will point out the benefits and have a tendency to overdo it “a little” . And yes, people are looking for a home and most of them won’t want to be the founder of a place they possibly could name: „Drive Trough-Bed & Breakfast. All bucks included!“

  • @m.maxham6629
    @m.maxham6629 Před 8 měsíci

    The last house was a multiple family house. Meaning it is set out to have one stairway and on each level there would be an apartment for one family.

  • @tubekulose
    @tubekulose Před 8 měsíci +3

    "Haus" isn't pronounced "hoss" but "house" and "Zimmer" is pronounced "tsimmer".(German "z" = "ts"-sound).
    "Marburg" (as everything with "-burg") isn't "Mar-börg" but "Mar-bourg".
    Maybe you'll read it this time.

  • @JohnDoe-us5rq
    @JohnDoe-us5rq Před 8 měsíci +1

    A absolute pro with having all those doors is when frying food the smell stays in the kitchen 😃

  • @pakabe8774
    @pakabe8774 Před 8 měsíci +1

    In Germany, prebuilt houses are meant to last at least 70 years (up to 120y) massive builds or stone houses are meant to last at least 100 years (up to 150y). If taken care properly, at least stonehouses can last for centuries (with some modernisations after time).

  • @Mathis240
    @Mathis240 Před 8 měsíci +1

    19:11 Thats the Basement. Many houses in germany has a basement to store tools, wheels, shoes and so on. The red machine you see there is a oil or gas heating system.
    The prices of german houses vary a lot of course. When you want a solid and not this old house, then you have to pay a lot more. Some houses are so called "Fertighäuser" or modular built houses. They are not this solid or as well insulated as the more solid ones. Some houses are really old too and get heated up with oil- or gas-heating systems. This houses often are bad insulated or have old and leaking pipes as well. Then you have to renovate them to fulfill the governments energy guidelines. Thats of course really expensive and often costs up to the half of the purchase-price of the house itself.
    It's really hard for young families to get a affordable house this days, and its doesnt get any easier i guess.

  • @Gigaearl
    @Gigaearl Před 7 měsíci

    I live in a village near Marburg, my house only cost €21,500. Okay, there's a bit of work to be done on it, I've been renovating for 10 years now. The housewarming party is scheduled for 2053

  • @maxarix
    @maxarix Před 8 měsíci

    Really enjoy your content keep it up 🔥 greetings from Hessen

  • @caccioman
    @caccioman Před 8 měsíci +1

    You definitely should come and visit a couple of parts in Germany

  • @Sandfrau
    @Sandfrau Před 7 měsíci

    Marburg is one of the bigger cities in Hessen and like people said within an hour of Frankfurt. And the university and medical stuff is big in Marburg and Gießen (right next to Marburg). If you looking for creeper houses you have to look in in east Germany. In Sachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt or Thüringen.

  • @julianeschulz3186
    @julianeschulz3186 Před 7 měsíci

    they show you pictures with furniture and a kitchen, but it usually is sold completely empty… it’s just so that you can imagine living there better 😅

  • @Moonfog_PSN
    @Moonfog_PSN Před 8 měsíci +1

    Please more from that kind of content ❤

  • @sorenwitte7637
    @sorenwitte7637 Před 8 měsíci +1

    For the conversion rate 1m² is roughly 3.2 ft² so if 100m² is 300ft² plus 20 to 30 so just m² × 3 and add a little bit to roughly get there .

    • @uliwehner
      @uliwehner Před 8 měsíci

      your math is "limping" as we say :) It is easier to just multiply 1m² by 10 to get square feet, since 3 times 3 is 9.... that gets you there easily and close enough.

  • @IamnotfromUSA
    @IamnotfromUSA Před 8 měsíci +1

    Just so you know Me and my brother at age of 10 and 8 where jumping from 2nd floor height into 1 meter of snow we also climbed trees around 4 to 5 meters height also but that is absolutly safe for children our grip strength was better then.

  • @taukakao
    @taukakao Před 8 měsíci +2

    The last house was the weirdest thing.
    I've never seen marble stairs in Germany, I don't know who would build that xD

    • @Fenster134
      @Fenster134 Před 8 měsíci

      Hm... I saw that pretty often here in our region im Schwabenländle.
      Especially in houses built in the 50s I guess.

    • @mats7492
      @mats7492 Před 8 měsíci

      pretty common houses from the 1960s and 70s..

    • @KatieLeary
      @KatieLeary Před 8 měsíci

      The room with the dolls was pretty creepy too. And all the rooms were simultaneously cluttered but didn't have much in it.

    • @mats7492
      @mats7492 Před 8 měsíci

      Looks like an old ladies house..@@KatieLeary

  • @KamillaMirabelle
    @KamillaMirabelle Před 8 měsíci

    A reason for the price difference, is how house are build Germany other places in Europe, is that they are made to last much, much longer.. and as you mentioned in another video a big tree (like +50 years oaks) would only do local damage to the roof maybe a brick or two..
    Another reason is that people don't move that much

  • @ankag.2982
    @ankag.2982 Před 7 měsíci

    There is one significant difference between german and american housing market - in the US, if you buy a house, apartement, condominium... you have to pay attention about the local taxes. You can end up paying a lot of monthly/yearly taxes depending on the state/area/city that you live in. I have learned, that these taxes vary extremely and can go up to the thousands every month like NYC or a few hunders in some very rural areas. It is not like that in germany. You of course pay property taxes as a house owner, but it does not vary depending on the location/state you are in, but it depends mainly on the size of the property you own. You pay property taxes yearly, I think if you have 500 qm property you pay little less than a 1000 Euros a year in Grundsteuer/Propertytax.(Iam not exactly sure about the numbers, but compared to the US market ist is forseeable and affordable) You pay a Real estate transfer tax when you buy the house but only once and that can be quite a lot. So maybe you pay a high price on the house and a lot of fees and taxes for buying it, but do not end up paying many thousands of Euros in yearly taxes every year.

  • @theschmonkiboy
    @theschmonkiboy Před 8 měsíci

    1:40 this looks originally like my first cobble stone house in minecraft 🤣

  • @L2740G2CG
    @L2740G2CG Před 8 měsíci +2

    🚨 You should definitely take the German theory exams for the class B driver’s license online! That would be cool to see.

  • @SpacyNG
    @SpacyNG Před 7 měsíci

    About the furniture, appliances and garden stuff, most houses (and apartments) in Germany are basically completely empty. Usually the only things are whats installed right into the house like for example the toilet, shower, maybe the kitchen sink. If you're lucky and mostly for "used"/existing buildings, you might get a bit more of like the whole kitchen, but not much more than that.

    • @Leenapanther
      @Leenapanther Před 7 měsíci

      I always wonder where that kitchen tradition comes from. It seems so unpractical.

  • @toomasargel8503
    @toomasargel8503 Před 8 měsíci

    12:11 man by 210.000 eyros You get at Estonia ridaelamubox ) only piece of house with 3 bedroom or 4bedroom but not house but aparment. ..or on old no waterclosed and water get on well no inside watersystem at all. 6 bedroom house. Need paint maintinance isolation for 5 F winter etc.

  • @hobbyracer2814
    @hobbyracer2814 Před 8 měsíci +2

    a population of 80k in a town or city may not be much for you, but for someone who was born on an island with it's biggest town having a population of 14k it is alot

  • @erwindermaurer5860
    @erwindermaurer5860 Před 7 měsíci

    You should probably look for classic half-timbered "Fachwerk" houses, that would be a typical German house with charm, which is also guaranteed to be used (with luck, a few hundred years) :)

  • @Jayco951
    @Jayco951 Před 7 měsíci

    Marburg is where the Grimm Brothers wrote their fairytales in the 1.800s.
    Their most Famous ones are Snow White, Little Red Riding Hood, Sleeping Beauty/Cinderella, Rapunzel and Hansel and Gretel.

  • @chrisb2942
    @chrisb2942 Před 8 měsíci +1

    The 2nd was just an advertisement and don't look at the price. You most likely would've needed to buy the property on top of it as well as the furnishing like kitchen, bathrooms, floors, stairs all on top. Not to speak the garden, patio, garage.. then you most likely need furniture too. Around 1 to 1.2 million would be a good price for it, I assume.

  • @theredpoint5886
    @theredpoint5886 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Now do the same but in Switzerland... 🤑

  • @TwinPeaksIndustries
    @TwinPeaksIndustries Před 4 měsíci

    Our house was bought by my grand-uncle in 1968 for about 250.000 Austrian Schilling, equivalent to about 93.000€ today. Thats for a 300m² house and 1300m² of land. Today you'd pay at least half a million for something this size

  • @jonathankolberg2706
    @jonathankolberg2706 Před 7 měsíci

    19:04 the red thing is the heating system

  • @martinweimann438
    @martinweimann438 Před 7 měsíci

    about the grass in the driveway: its meant to be like that, its called rasengitterstein. its designed to let rainwater soak in the ground. by the way, spraying weedkiller on driveways is not allowed in germany, it could cost you up to 50.000€.

  • @snowjaeger6113
    @snowjaeger6113 Před 8 měsíci

    The price quoted for the second house didn’t even include a cellar or even foundation. It says Ausbauhaus, meaning once you’ve got the foundation done all you get is four walls and a roof, not even windows, doors, rooms, sanitary installations or a kitchen. And keep on dreaming about that pool and landscaping.

  • @Bioshyn
    @Bioshyn Před 8 měsíci

    the house is usually even not that expensive, it's the ground it's on. 640 m² in a big city in Germany will cost you around a million, so that first one is actually kinda cheap.
    ground costs on average 272€/m² overall, in cities with 500k inhabitants it's 1611€/m² though, in the countryside it's just 76€/m²

  • @blacksilver4711
    @blacksilver4711 Před 7 měsíci

    Hallo Ryan,ich bin ein echter Berliner Junge (50 jahre alt)
    ich sehe mir deine Videos erst seit kurzer Zeit an, denke aber das ich jetzt alle gehen habe.Deine ehrliche Art und weise,sowie den vergleich Amerika und Deutschland, finde ich beeindruckend( dieses Wort ist mal wieder Typisch deutsch) umschreibt aber auch das was ich meine.Als wirklich Typisch Deutscher, könnte ich jetzt ewig schreiben, aber ich versuche es tatsächlich mal "kurz und knapp"
    Alle Videos über Deutschland sind fast authentisch, oft ganz nah dran,wie wir sind. Um uns zu begreifen oder zu verstehen muss man uns besuchen, mal tatsächlich ein paar Tage mit einem Deutschen den Tag verbringen. Denn letztendlich sind auch wir Deutschen sehr verschieden, aber doch irgendwie gleich. Ich bin fest davon überzeugt, das du ein guter Deutscher Amerikaner werden würdest ,und uns so zeigst wie wie Du uns tatsächlich siehst, denke ich, das unser Image durch solche Amerikaner wie du es bist, sehr schnell ins Positive gehoben werden könnte 🙂 . Dankeschön für deine Videos. Wir halten dir immer ein Bett frei 🙂