Land prices in the Heidelberg area

  • Erstellt am 2021-09-04 20:34:01

pagoni2020

2021-09-05 11:26:41
  • #1

That's how it is...... simply widen the radius and voilà.......
 

11ant

2021-09-05 12:04:00
  • #2

Only if you buy on the market. Besides the market, "the world is still in order," but with the strategy of General Director Heinrich Haffenloher from Kir Royal, you won’t get far there.

That is the surest way to despair: widen the funnel, remain unsuccessful, lower demands, remain unsuccessful, ...
Better is, seemingly illogically, to sharpen the target pattern.
And besides, an intermediate house can be a springboard.
 

pagoni2020

2021-09-05 12:23:33
  • #3
Well then..., since this is my home region, where my former house still is, I know that looking beyond the usual horizon can open up extremely interesting possibilities. My suggestion to enlarge the radius once was exactly about sharpening the target profile. Proximity to the city is simply a significant and price-driving criterion everywhere. I am speaking only exactly for this region known to me. If I go in one direction, prices remain high for a very long time; if I go in the other direction (perhaps less known to me), prices drop significantly faster...... at the SAME distance! Maybe this makes it easier to understand, although this already becomes evident by the radius expansion in the search results; there is little room for misunderstanding.
 

doubleTT

2021-09-05 13:23:01
  • #4


Proximity to the city, highway access, and ICE train station are the criteria on which prices are based. It becomes significantly cheaper when access to local public transport, the approach to the nearest highway access, and the distance to the next train station become inconvenient. Although the commuter belt is increasingly affected by price excesses as well. The Rhein-Neckar area is indeed a highly sought-after spot between the metropolitan areas of Frankfurt and Stuttgart, and especially the city of Heidelberg is on par with Munich’s conditions.
 

pagoni2020

2021-09-05 13:52:07
  • #5
I am aware of that and it probably applies throughout the country. But maybe it makes sense to look at one’s very own individual situation once. Do I really need highway proximity, ICE, do I actually go to the station? Do I really use public transport or is it really as bad as I believe/say or is it simply (understandably) inconvenient for me? I have met some people who never take the train/bus, even though public transport was mentioned by them and available; they never go to concerts or exhibitions either, even if cultural institutions were cited as parameters. Such and similar general parameters make it expensive, that’s true. I worked in HD and lived on the Neckar for a few decades. Heidelberg was never an option for me and my better-earning colleagues to build a house even back then. All house builders moved to the countryside, it would have been impossible otherwise. If you go a bit further into the Palatinate, the Hessian Odenwald, or the Neckar towards the east, you are much more likely to find something, even today; at least not to the same extent absurd.
 

doubleTT

2021-09-05 14:56:38
  • #6


That’s all true. However, I have noticed that the southern Wine Route has now reached the price level of the Rhine-Neckar region. That was not the case three years ago. The Odenwald is still cheaper because here the towns often really have a problem with local supply or, for example, schools. If you don’t need that, it’s of course beautiful there! To the east you just have to drive very long along the Neckar by car, which is a dealbreaker for many commuters. But I also believe that the pull of the cities will eventually turn toward the countryside again for various reasons – just not in the short term. In ten years, houses may also be dumped on the market because the age pyramid has normalized again. But who knows how it will develop.
 
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