The heavy cost of housing in Shanghai, now the world’s most expensive city
The heavy cost of housing in China's biggest metropolis
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Recently overtaking Hong Kong as the planet's most expensive city, Shanghai is exorbitant when it comes to buying or renting a home, with sales prices in the centre comfortably outpacing global hotspots like London and New York. From luxurious mansions and opulent apartments to impoverished dwellings, discover the extremes less affluent residents are willing to endure in order to keep a roof over their heads. Click through the gallery to get the lowdown on Shanghai's sizzling housing market as demand reaches fever pitch...
Punishing prices
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According to Xitai Data, which compiles real-time property sales figures across China, the average price per square foot of residential real estate in Shanghai comes in at a hefty $950 (£691), rising to $1,820 (£1.3k) in Huangpu, the city's most expensive area, which is dearer than some of the most upscale parts of London, New York, Paris, San Francisco and Geneva.
The struggle to buy
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With real estate prices stubbornly high, buying a property is out of reach for Shanghai's poorest residents. And though most of the city's denizens are homeowners, many are weighed down by huge mortgages: a typical pre-owned two-bedroom apartment can cost in excess of $1.5 million (£1.1m), while the average monthly salary in the city is only around $1,700 (£1.2k) and the minimum wage stands at a paltry $374 (£270) per month.
House price surge
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House prices in Shanghai increased every month between December 2019 and May 2021, and following a brief dip earlier this year, are on the up once again. Their seemingly unstoppable rise is a major concern for the powers that be, who fear a monster bubble is developing and hindering hard-up potential first-home buyers desperate to get on the property ladder.
Investment opportunity
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Chinese citizens have relatively few options when it comes to investing their hard-earned cash, with real estate being the number one choice, accounting for 70% of household wealth in the country. Putting money into bricks and mortar is also seen by many as the safest investment, so it's hardly surprising the home-buying frenzy in Shanghai is showing no real signs of slowing down.
Price-to-rent ratio
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Buying a home in Shanghai is actually much more expensive than merely renting it. The price-to-rent ratio is super-high in the city, almost triple that of New York, which means owning a property is a far less cost-effective option than renting it. Plus, ominously, a high price-to-rent ratio is a housing bubble red flag, and can signal a crash is on the horizon.
Typical rents
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While the vast majority of Shanghai residents are homeowners, renters of course get the better deal. Unlike property purchase prices, rents are cheaper in the city compared to London and New York. The monthly cost to lease a three-bedroom apartment is typically $3,125 (£2.3k) in the centre, dropping to $1,509 (£1.1k) on the outskirts, while a one-bedroom apartment averages $1,300 (£943) per month in the centre and $675 (£490) in the suburbs.
Population explosion
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Fuelled by mass migration from rural parts of China, Shanghai's population has almost doubled in the past two decades, up from 14.8 million in 2001 to 27.8 million today, despite efforts to cap the number at 25 million. To meet this massively increased demand for housing and infrastructure, much of the city has been transformed over the last 20 or so years.
Redevelopment push
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From the 1990s onwards, thousands of land parcels were released to the government for redevelopment, prompting a major overhaul of Shanghai. Swathes of the city were bulldozed, with many traditional homes and other old buildings replaced by gleaming high rises, with the once-sleepy Pudong neighbourhood, which is now home to the city's financial district and its tallest towers, undergoing the most dramatic transformation.
Mega-gentrification downsides
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This fast-tracked gentrification has come at a price, however. Tens of thousands of families have been displaced, breaking up close-knit communities, while house prices have risen to unsustainable levels and the makeover has resulted in the destruction of much of the historical fabric of the city. There has, however, been a stronger emphasis on heritage conservation in more recent years.
'Nail house' holdouts
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The redevelopment drive also spawned the 'nail house' phenomenon, when residents steadfastly refuse to sell developers their property (which has usually been undervalued), staying put while neighbouring homes are razed and the new development takes shape around the old house. A main road was even constructed around one notable holdout in Shanghai, which blocked traffic for 14 years before it was demolished by the authorities.
Housing styles
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Most coveted neighbourhoods
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Other classy districts
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Among the other classy districts are Hongkou, a fascinating blend of old and new, and Changning, which is mainly upmarket residential but features attractions such as Shanghai Zoo. The city is also home to five themed new towns that mimic iconic destinations in Europe: Thames Town (UK), Pujiang (Italy), Anting (Germany), Gaoqiao (the Netherlands) and Luodian Town (Sweden).
Affordable areas
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Record house price
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Luxury market boom
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Exclusive policies
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High-end property to buy
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High-end property to rent
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Mid-range property to buy
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Mid-range property to rent
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Micro apartments and coliving
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Slim pickings
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Cheaper property to rent
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Rigid hukou system
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Hard to get
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The catch is these benefits are restricted to the area the individual is registered, therefore residents who weren't born in Shanghai aren't entitled to its hukou perks. The system has been relaxed in recent years, but it's still far from easy to obtain a Shanghai hukou and only migrants who have lived and worked in the city for five to seven years, 'talented' individuals, gifted Chinese grads returning from study abroad and wealthy outsiders who have invested heavily in the city are even considered.
Extreme sharing
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Intense overcrowding
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Fire risk
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Government crackdown
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Homelessness problem
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Official action
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Tougher regulation
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Divorce loophole
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Building bonanza
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Of course, the most obvious solution to a housing shortage crisis and rampant overcrowding is to build, build, build, and the Shanghai authorities are rising to the challenge with aplomb. The local government recently announced it would construct 220,000 rental homes over the next five years, an increase of 45% from the previous half-decade.
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