„The flat has 90 square metres, so it must cost X.“ This is still often the thinking in Nuremberg. Buyers think differently in 2025. When it comes to selling property in Nuremberg, I see very clearly that buyers no longer buy square metres, they buy total costs. And total costs are more than the purchase price. If you ignore this, you may get interest, but in the end you won't get any affordable offers or hard discounts.
In this article, I explain what buyers mean by „total costs“, which factors have a particularly strong impact in Nuremberg and how I, as a property agent in Nuremberg, derive a pricing strategy from this that does not fail because of the budget or the bank.
What „total cost“ really means for buyers
Total costs are all that a buyer has to bear in real terms:
Purchase price
Incidental purchase costs
Ongoing costs (property charges, operating costs, property tax)
Maintenance and reserves
Modernisation and renovation
For houses, additional typical maintenance items
For flats, additional WEG issues and possible special levies
Buyers no longer just compare „price per square metre“, but „what will this home cost me in real life?“.
Market value: If you ignore total costs, you will quickly end up off the market
The market value is the price that can realistically be achieved under normal market conditions. If total costs are high, the willingness to pay the purchase price decreases. This is not an opinion, it is mathematical logic.
I derive the market value:
Standard land value as location orientation
Market analysis in the neighbourhood
Reference properties with real sales prices
Material value method for houses
Income capitalisation approach for rented properties
These building blocks help to realistically translate the total costs into the market value.
Incidental purchase costs: the largest „invisible“ cost block
Incidental purchase costs such as land transfer tax, notary and land registry costs are due immediately for buyers and are non-negotiable. This acts like a budget cap.
Many owners underestimate the extent to which ancillary purchase costs limit the maximum possible purchase price, even in sought-after neighbourhoods such as Johannis, Wöhrd, Erlenstegen or Mögeldorf.
Running costs: House charges often determine the purchase price of flats
In the case of condominiums, house money is one of the biggest levers because it has a monthly effect. Buyers not only look at the figure, but also at the composition.
Ask buyers:
How high is the non-recoverable portion?
How high is the reserve?
Are there any planned measures?
Is there a threat of special levies?
High running costs reduce the scope for the purchase price. This is often particularly true in Langwasser and Langwasser-Süd, but also in Südstadt, Gostenhof and St. Leonhard.
WEG issues: Reserves and special apportionment risk are real price factors
WEG is not just paper, it is risk or security.
If buyers recognise from the minutes and overview of reserves that major measures are pending, they immediately assess this. This results in discounts because buyers do not want to pay twice: once the purchase price and later a special levy.
Modernisation: Buyers deduct investments directly from the price
Buyers are calculating 2025 very quickly:
Heating
Windows
Electrics
Bathroom and pipes
Roof and façade for houses
Energy status and running costs
The more unclear or older these issues are, the more they depress the price. A freshly painted hallway does nothing to change this.
Standard land value: location helps, but does not cancel out total costs
Standard land value is important as a location guide. But buyers don't say: „Good location, no matter what it costs.“ They say: „Good location - if it fits into my total cost budget.“
This is an important reality for any pricing strategy.
Market analysis: Why some properties in Nuremberg are struggling despite their good location
A market analysis often shows exactly this pattern:
Good location, but high total costs = long negotiations.
Good location, clear costs and good documentation = quick decisions.
Unclear costs = jumps.
Total costs are the reason why some offers are „actually good“ but still don't go through.
Reference objects: Why correct comparisons must always take total costs into account
Reference properties are real sales. In order for them to be comparable, they must not only compare location and area, but also:
Similar house allowance and reserve fund for flats
similar level of modernisation
Similar ongoing cost logic
comparable risk profile
If you are only comparing prices per square metre, you are missing the point.
Asset value method and capitalised earnings value method: two ways to logically record total costs
Material value method: relevant for houses, because substance and maintenance requirements have a strong impact.
Income capitalisation approach: relevant for rented properties because income and costs are directly included in the valuation.
Both methods help to evaluate not only the price, but also the cost logic.
Did you know: Many buyers decide „against“ a property because of a single cost point
An example from practice:
House rent too high.
Special levy likely.
Heating old.
No parking space and high parking costs indirectly.
Roof unclear.
Often it is not the sum of all points, but one point that tips the budget.
Step-by-step: How to turn total costs into an advantage when selling in Nuremberg
- Make total costs transparent: Purchase price, running costs, expected investments.
- Provide complete documents: in the case of flats especially WEG documents.
- Document modernisations: Years, evidence, scope.
- Use market analysis: Which cost points do buyers in the neighbourhood react particularly sensitively to?
- Select reference objects carefully: comparable including cost structure.
- Derive market value: Standard land value as a guide, market behaviour as a reality test.
- Set a pricing strategy: financially viable, plausible, stable in negotiations.
Conclusion: In Nuremberg, the seller who delivers cost clarity wins
When selling property in Nuremberg in 2025, buyers will no longer just buy square metres, but total costs. Those who make ancillary purchase costs, house charges, reserves, modernisation and risks transparent and derive the market value from the standard land value, market analysis and reference properties will receive fewer „tourists“ and more genuine, affordable offers.
If you want to sell your property in Nuremberg and want to set a price that not only sounds good but also suits real buyers, as a real estate agent in Nuremberg I will accompany you with a well-founded valuation and a sales process that does not hide total costs but turns them into negotiating security.
