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June 15, 2026
·
5 mins

The real cost of renting unfurnished: why ready-to-live homes win

Ready to live furnished apartment with workspace

The listing says 1,200 euros a month. The unfurnished apartment two streets away says 950. Easy decision? Not so fast. The cheapest rent on paper is very often the most expensive way to live, especially if you are moving to a new city or staying less than a couple of years. Let us do the math that listings never show you.

The furniture bill nobody budgets for

Furnishing even a small one bedroom apartment from scratch adds up quickly. A bed and a decent mattress, a sofa, a table and chairs, a wardrobe, kitchen equipment, lamps, curtains, and the hundred small things you only notice when you need them. A modest setup easily reaches 3,000 to 5,000 euros. Spread over a one year stay, that is 250 to 400 euros every month, on top of your rent.

And when you leave? You either sell everything at a loss, pay to move it, or pay to dispose of it. Furniture is an investment that only pays off if you stay put for many years.

The hidden setup costs

An unfurnished rental usually also means utility contracts to open and close, each with activation fees and notice periods. Internet installation that can take weeks in some cities. Agency commissions, often one or two months of rent. Larger deposits, commonly two to three months. None of these appear in the listing price, but all of them appear on your bank statement.

The cheapest rent on paper is often the most expensive way to live.

The cost of your time

Now add the part nobody puts a number on. Days spent comparing internet providers in a language you are still learning. Waiting at home for deliveries. Assembling flat pack furniture. Figuring out which authority registers your electricity meter. If you are starting a new job or studying, those first weeks are exactly when you have the least time and energy to spare.

Ready to live furnished apartment with workspace

When unfurnished still makes sense

To be fair: if you are settling somewhere for five years or more, buying your own furniture pays off, and an unfurnished long term lease is usually the right call. This article is not for that move. It is for every other move: the new job in a new city, the semester abroad, the year you want to try living somewhere else, the months between homes.

The all-inclusive alternative

A furnished, all-inclusive home flips the equation. One monthly payment covers furniture, utilities, WiFi, and support. Your move costs a suitcase and a signature. You can budget precisely from day one, with no surprise bills and no upfront investment to recover.

At Habyt, every home comes fully furnished with utilities and high speed internet included, and with flexible terms that match your plans. The apartment works from the moment you walk in, so your energy goes into your new city, not your to-do list.

See what all-inclusive living costs in your city at habyt.com.

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