In france, it's easily 2x those prices 💀 On the other hand, as a software engineer, i'm getting paid 2.5x more than my polish friend with a similar job so it evens out a bit! (although house/apartment prices just are ridiculous these days) Also thank you for your content, i've been learning polish since march and i really appreciate how much i'm learning thanks to you! It's quite difficult considering i know only French/English but i want to understand my polish girlfriend/friends
In the USA the prices of renting and buying can vary wildly, but the prices are definitely higher across the board than they are in Poland. Places like NYC, San Francisco, Boston, Washington, DC, Los Angeles, Miami, Honolulu, etc. will have substantially higher rents and purchase prices, while smaller cities in states like Iowa, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi, West Virginia, etc. will be much less expensive.
Tak! It's actually my mother's maiden name, I'm Polish from her side of the family. I had actually just visited Warsaw and Poznań in September @@LetsPolish
Man great video, cause I`m planning to move in there next year. By the way, I`m only able to get outta Brazil because of Karta Polaka. That`s been said, could you make a video about this topic? What you (and other poles) think of descendants with this document, living, working, etc. in Poland?
Thanks for the vid! How about buying a house in the countryside near an area like Worclaw or Krakow, with access to the mountains and the city - any idea of average price for a small house? Is there a website that shows average sales prices per region? Struggling to find one.
This interested me a lot actually. I’m New York City, one of my friends pays $17,000 a month. And it’s not anything special. One bedroom. A few other friends pay between 5-8k a month.
Wait wait wait. You say seventeen thousand dollars a month?! For renting? So after a year of renting in NY (if you saved the money) you could buy a brand new flat in Warsaw. Wow
To be fair, $17,000 a month ia not typical for one bedroom in NYC. I'd say that $4000+ is more common, but those places will not offer much more than the apartment itself and they are not likely to have any amenities. It's very hard to believe that $17000/mo for a one bedroom apartment isn't going to be offer anything special.
@@josephbrandenburg4373Everything's easier when you know the language I believe. We can assure ourselves "No, it doesn't work that way" but I think it is.
@@LetsPolish - at minimum, legal contracts for leases and purchases would be expected to be in local languages....and one can HIRE A BILINGUAL LAWYER to help! That's how I got my PESEL number, I didn't know Polish at the time, but a lawyer I hired told me where to go and what to do and I got it the same day I went! I did take Polish class all last year and now have some basics of language for some speaking or reading....but still certainly not enough for any legalese! But I have lawyer for my other countries too, even as native speaker, bcs landlords are a screwy group of money-grubbers, no matter where you are at in the world!
In france, it's easily 2x those prices 💀
On the other hand, as a software engineer, i'm getting paid 2.5x more than my polish friend with a similar job so it evens out a bit! (although house/apartment prices just are ridiculous these days)
Also thank you for your content, i've been learning polish since march and i really appreciate how much i'm learning thanks to you!
It's quite difficult considering i know only French/English but i want to understand my polish girlfriend/friends
In the USA the prices of renting and buying can vary wildly, but the prices are definitely higher across the board than they are in Poland. Places like NYC, San Francisco, Boston, Washington, DC, Los Angeles, Miami, Honolulu, etc. will have substantially higher rents and purchase prices, while smaller cities in states like Iowa, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi, West Virginia, etc. will be much less expensive.
super useful video as I'm going to hopefully live in Poland for the foreseeable future next month
Oh, you have a Polish last name, did you know that?
Tak! It's actually my mother's maiden name, I'm Polish from her side of the family. I had actually just visited Warsaw and Poznań in September @@LetsPolish
@@AntoniRzepecki Nice :) So have fun when you get to Poland :)
Man great video, cause I`m planning to move in there next year. By the way, I`m only able to get outta Brazil because of Karta Polaka. That`s been said, could you make a video about this topic? What you (and other poles) think of descendants with this document, living, working, etc. in Poland?
Ok. I’ll try to make an episode about this topic
Thanks for the vid! How about buying a house in the countryside near an area like Worclaw or Krakow, with access to the mountains and the city - any idea of average price for a small house? Is there a website that shows average sales prices per region? Struggling to find one.
This interested me a lot actually. I’m New York City, one of my friends pays $17,000 a month. And it’s not anything special. One bedroom. A few other friends pay between 5-8k a month.
Wait wait wait. You say seventeen thousand dollars a month?! For renting? So after a year of renting in NY (if you saved the money) you could buy a brand new flat in Warsaw. Wow
To be fair, $17,000 a month ia not typical for one bedroom in NYC. I'd say that $4000+ is more common, but those places will not offer much more than the apartment itself and they are not likely to have any amenities. It's very hard to believe that $17000/mo for a one bedroom apartment isn't going to be offer anything special.
I want to go to Poland! I think European cities are more beautiful (and much more safe) than American cities.
Price to rent an apartment in small town in Poland is very similar to rent in a small town in the United States.
You forgot to mention that not anyone can buy in Poland. Especially if they aren't european citizens.
Are you sure of that? I mean you're probably right but I didn't know that.
🤔 I wonder if they make it easier if you know the language?
@@josephbrandenburg4373Everything's easier when you know the language I believe. We can assure ourselves "No, it doesn't work that way" but I think it is.
@@LetsPolish - at minimum, legal contracts for leases and purchases would be expected to be in local languages....and one can HIRE A BILINGUAL LAWYER to help! That's how I got my PESEL number, I didn't know Polish at the time, but a lawyer I hired told me where to go and what to do and I got it the same day I went! I did take Polish class all last year and now have some basics of language for some speaking or reading....but still certainly not enough for any legalese! But I have lawyer for my other countries too, even as native speaker, bcs landlords are a screwy group of money-grubbers, no matter where you are at in the world!
How can one buy a flat using financing as a foreigner if my income comes from abroad? I’m a European citizen