What does it mean?
The Housing Division of Svea Court of Appeal is the appellate body where decisions from the Rent Tribunal can be challenged. The court reviews appeals concerning rental disputes, tenant protection, terminations, rent increases, and other housing law matters. It is the highest instance in most rental disputes — the Supreme Court rarely takes on rent cases.
The Housing Division at Svea Court of Appeal has specialist expertise in rental and housing cooperative legislation. Appealing to the court normally requires leave to appeal (prövningstillstånd). The process is written but oral hearings may occur. The court's rulings become guiding precedents for how Rent Tribunals across the country should apply the law.
Key Points
- Appellate body for Rent Tribunal decisions
- Reviews rental disputes, tenant protection, terminations, and rent increases
- Normally requires leave to appeal to take up a case
- Highest instance in practice — the Supreme Court rarely hears rent cases
- Rulings become guiding precedents for Rent Tribunals nationwide
Practical Tip
If you want to appeal a Rent Tribunal decision, you must do so within three weeks. Check whether leave to appeal is required and clearly argue why the decision should be changed.
Based on content from Bofrid's Knowledge Bank
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