
Frankfurt
Financial capital. ECB + banking hub. Post-Brexit relocation demand. STR restricted 56 days.
* Exchange rates shown for illustration only, based on ECB mid-market rate. Actual transactions may be subject to conversion fees.
Local STR Rules — Frankfurt
Permit required for ALL STR, even home-sharing. 8-week cap without compensation; beyond requires replacement housing or payment. Altstadt permits can be refused. Fines up to €25k.
Market Analysis — Frankfurt
Key demand drivers and main investment risks
✅Demand Drivers
- •ECB + banking hub
- •Post-Brexit relocation demand
- •Airport hub
- •Expat financial sector
⚠️Key Risks
- •Oversupply in commercial sector
- •STR restricted 56 days
- •High transfer tax
Properties in Frankfurt
773 for sale·373 for rent
Properties for Sale in Frankfurt
Latest Listings
Showing 1–12 of 50 listings
4-Bed Apartment · 107 m² in Rödelheim
4-Bed Apartment · 99 m² in Innenstadt
3-Bed Apartment · 68 m² in Ostend
3-Bed Apartment · 125 m² in Sachsenhausen
1-Bed Apartment · 45 m² in Bornheim
2-Bed Apartment · 53 m² in Gallus
3-Bed Apartment · 77 m² in Nordend
3-Bed Apartment · 66 m² in Westend
3-Bed Apartment · 71 m² in Bahnhofsviertel
3-Bed Apartment · 81 m² in Westend
3-Bed Apartment · 115 m² in Bahnhofsviertel
1-Bed Studio · 31 m² in Innenstadt
Yield by Neighborhood — Frankfurt
Microzone investment comparison — CASABROVA
| Neighborhood | Price/m² | STR Yield | STR Status | Character |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ostend | €5,000–€8,500 (₪16,971–₪28,851) | 4.5%–7% | N/A | ECB-anchored gentrification; value vs Nordend |
| Europaviertel | €5,000–€8,500 (₪16,971–₪28,851) | 4.5%–7% | N/A | Flagship new-build district; U5 catalyst, ~6-8%/yr |
| Bornheim hipgentrifyingculture | €5,000–€7,500 (₪16,971–₪25,457) | 5%–7% | STR Restricted 🟡 | Hip neighborhood. Berger Strasse culture. Gentrifying with strong tenant demand. |
| Nordend premiumresidentialbanking | €6,000–€9,000 (₪20,365–₪30,548) | 4.5%–7% | STR Restricted 🟡 | Most desirable residential area. Tree-lined streets. Banking professionals. |
| Sachsenhausen mixednightlifetourist | €5,500–€8,500 (₪18,668–₪28,851) | 5%–7.5% | STR Restricted 🟡 | South-bank district. Ebbelwei pubs. Mix of old and new. Tourist draw + residential. |
| Westend premiumcorporatevillas | €7,000–€11,000 (₪23,759–₪37,336) | 4%–6% | STR Restricted 🟡 | Consulate district. Villa architecture. Highest rents in Frankfurt. Corporate tenants. |
| Gallus | €3,678–€8,660 (₪12,484–₪29,394) | 5%–7.5% | License Required | Inner-city Frankfurt district adjoining station and office areas |
| Bockenheim universitystudenttransit | €4,500–€7,000 (₪15,274–₪23,759) | 5%–7.5% | STR Restricted 🟡 | University area. High student demand. Good public transport to banking district. |
Yield and price ranges are internal AI-research estimates from public real-estate portals (Tranio, Investropa, Globes, etc.), refreshed quarterly. Not primary-source data.
Investment Areas in Frankfurt
Ostend
ECB-anchored gentrification; value vs Nordend
Price from €5,000/m² (₪16,971/m²)
Europaviertel
Flagship new-build district; U5 catalyst, ~6-8%/yr
Price from €5,000/m² (₪16,971/m²)
Bornheim
Hip neighborhood. Berger Strasse culture. Gentrifying with strong tenant demand.
Price from €5,000/m² (₪16,971/m²)
Nordend
Most desirable residential area. Tree-lined streets. Banking professionals.
Price from €6,000/m² (₪20,365/m²)
Sachsenhausen
South-bank district. Ebbelwei pubs. Mix of old and new. Tourist draw + residential.
Price from €5,500/m² (₪18,668/m²)
Westend
Consulate district. Villa architecture. Highest rents in Frankfurt. Corporate tenants.
Price from €7,000/m² (₪23,759/m²)
Gallus
Inner-city Frankfurt district adjoining station and office areas
Price from €3,678/m² (₪12,484/m²)
Bockenheim
University area. High student demand. Good public transport to banking district.
Price from €4,500/m² (₪15,274/m²)
Market Review — Frankfurt
Frankfurt, Europe's financial capital, offers a robust rental market driven by banking professionals and expats. The city has Germany's highest rental yields among major cities, particularly in the Nordend, Sachsenhausen, and Bornheim districts. As the ECB and major banks headquarters, tenant demand is resilient even during downturns. The limited housing supply and strict German tenant protections create a stable, predictable investment environment.
Last updated: April 26, 2026
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