Affordable housing is also becoming increasingly difficult to find in Saxony. The housing industry is facing the challenge of managing socially acceptable rents while investing and achieving rising climate targets, explained the Association of Saxon Housing Cooperatives (VSWG) and the Association of the Housing and Real Estate Industry (vdw) in Dresden. Both associations presented their annual balance sheet (2025) together for the first time. Many of the key figures are similar.
Bad times for new construction
The 117 housing companies in the vdw invested €703.6 million in 2026 - almost 11% more than in the previous year. Here, too, the money was mainly spent on maintenance (297.3 million euros) and modernization (284.7 million euros). 762 new apartments were built (2024: 719). "We expect a dramatic slump in new construction this year and in the coming years," emphasized vdw CEO Alexander Müller. The companies' forecasts are "very gloomy".
Vacancy leads to considerable loss of income
The two associations also have similar problems in other areas, such as vacancy. Around 24,000 apartments, or 8.2 percent of the housing stock, were vacant at the cooperatives. At the municipal companies, 9.5 percent of all apartments - more than 25,300 - were unable to find a new tenant. This is associated with enormous costs. The VSWG alone lost out on income of 94 million euros - 68 million in potential rental income, the rest in operating costs that could not be allocated.