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Rental Process 10 April 2026 RentStuttgart Editorial

How to Rent an Apartment in Stuttgart as a Foreigner

A practical step-by-step rental guide for expats in Stuttgart, from preparing your SCHUFA file to completing your Anmeldung after move-in.

What this guide helps you decide

This article is built for fast scanning first. Use the section headings for the long version, then jump to the FAQ or related pages if you need the next action rather than more theory.

Stuttgart’s rental market is competitive but not impossible. The city’s unusual geography — spread across hills and valleys — means that “close to the centre” does not always mean what you think it means on a map. Good apartments in well-connected districts like Mitte or West often receive multiple applications within days. If you are moving from abroad, the goal is not to become the perfect applicant. The goal is to look organised enough that an agent or landlord can say yes quickly.

Start with the right search platforms

For most expats, the real starting point is ImmobilienScout24. It has the largest supply, especially for standard unfurnished flats in central districts. Kleinanzeigen still matters for private listings, sublets, and more informal offers, but you need stronger fraud awareness there. If you are looking around Stuttgart-Mitte, Stuttgart-West, or Bad Cannstatt, expect a mix of agency listings and private landlords.

Set alerts for districts you can actually commute from. If your office is near Hauptbahnhof, Schlossplatz, or the industrial areas in Zuffenhausen or Untertürkheim, being close to the right U-Bahn or S-Bahn line usually matters more than shaving €50 off the rent. Stuttgart’s hilly terrain means some commutes are longer than the straight-line distance suggests.

Prepare your documents before you book viewings

In Stuttgart, speed matters. If you wait until after a viewing to assemble your file, you are already behind. Your standard application pack should include:

  • passport or Personalausweis copy
  • latest three salary slips or employment contract
  • SCHUFA Bonitätsauskunft if you already live in Germany
  • recent bank statements if your income proof is unusual
  • short self-introduction with job title, move date, and household size

If you are brand new to Germany and do not have SCHUFA yet, say that directly and replace it with stronger alternatives: employment contract, relocation letter, proof of savings, or a guarantor if available. Large landlords sometimes accept this more easily than small private owners.

Understand the difference between warm and cold rent

When a Stuttgart listing says Kaltmiete, that is the cold rent before utilities. Warmmiete includes the cold rent plus the listed service charges. For budgeting, many new arrivals underestimate the gap.

As a rough market reference, Stuttgart sits around €1,200 for a typical 1-bedroom and €1,550 for a 2-bedroom, but central, renovated, or well-connected units can easily go above that. Around Schlossplatz, Stuttgart-Mitte, or the nicer parts of Stuttgart-West, asking rents can move fast once demand spikes after summer relocation season.

At the viewing, act like a low-friction tenant

Stuttgart viewings are often efficient and sometimes crowded. The winning move is not charm. It is clarity.

Be ready to confirm:

  • your earliest move-in date
  • your visa or residence status if relevant
  • whether you smoke or have pets
  • whether the rent works comfortably with your net salary

If an agent shows a place in Stuttgart-West or near the centre, ask practical questions: basement storage, bike storage, heating type, kitchen ownership, and whether the address qualifies for resident parking. Those details matter more than generic enthusiasm.

Read the Mietvertrag carefully before signing

Your rental contract is the Mietvertrag. The biggest issues for newcomers are usually not hidden scams. They are normal German contract clauses that are unfamiliar if you have rented outside Germany before.

Check these points before you sign:

  1. exact cold rent and monthly Nebenkosten
  2. deposit amount and payment schedule
  3. whether the contract is open-ended or fixed-term
  4. who owns the fitted kitchen and appliances
  5. notice period and any renovation obligations

The deposit is usually held through a Mietkautionskonto or equivalent protected arrangement. Ask where it will be held and when you will receive confirmation. If the landlord requests a casual personal transfer without any paperwork, slow down.

Plan your first week after move-in

Once you have keys, the next urgent admin task is Anmeldung. In Stuttgart this is done through the Bürgeramt system, and you need the landlord confirmation form called Wohnungsgeberbestätigung. Without registration, simple tasks like opening some bank accounts, receiving your tax ID, or setting up parts of your bureaucracy chain become harder.

Book the registration appointment as soon as your move-in date is real. Slots can disappear quickly, especially at popular locations.

A realistic strategy if you are still abroad

If you are not yet in Stuttgart, do not assume you will land a long-term apartment before arrival. Many expats do better with a two-step plan:

  1. short furnished stay near a strong transit area such as Stuttgart-Mitte or Bad Cannstatt
  2. full long-term search once they can attend viewings in person

That approach is not glamorous, but it is usually cheaper than panic-signing a weak contract from abroad.

Common mistakes that slow foreigners down

  • applying with incomplete documents
  • not understanding warm vs cold rent
  • targeting only one prestige district
  • writing long generic messages instead of short factual ones
  • ignoring commute reality — Stuttgart’s hills make distance deceptive
  • waiting too long to ask for the Wohnungsgeberbestätigung

If you want a better shortlist before applying, read our neighbourhood guide and compare areas against your commute, social priorities, and rent ceiling. In Stuttgart, fit matters just as much as budget.

Quick answers

FAQ for this topic

Do most Stuttgart landlords ask for a SCHUFA report?

Yes. Even private landlords often expect a recent SCHUFA, proof of income, ID, and sometimes a short tenant profile in German or simple English.

Is three months' deposit normal in Stuttgart?

Yes. Three months of cold rent is the legal maximum and still the standard on most Stuttgart contracts.

Can I rent before I have completed my Anmeldung?

Yes, but you usually need the Wohnungsgeberbestätigung from your landlord after move-in so you can register at the Bürgeramt.

Which neighbourhoods are easiest for new expats to start with?

Stuttgart-Mitte, Stuttgart-West, and Bad Cannstatt are common starting points because they balance transport, social life, and realistic rental search options.