Although rental prices in Taiwan are not among the highest globally, the housing burden is disproportionately heavy. Rental pressure has increasingly become a key driver behind the rising cost of living.

TAIPEI, TAIWAN (MERXWIRE) – Taiwan’s rental burden is approaching a critical threshold. Recent data indicate that in urban areas, renters in Taiwan typically allocate 30% to 50% of their income to housing, exceeding the widely recognized 30% affordability threshold and approaching the 40% level commonly defined as “housing cost overburden.” Compared with OECD countries, Japan and South Korea face significantly higher effective financial pressure on renters.
While Numbeo’s 2026 data show that Taipei’s absolute rent levels remain below those of Tokyo and Seoul, the picture changes when local purchasing power is factored in. Due to persistently sluggish wage growth in Taiwan, the relative rent-to-purchasing-power pressure in Taipei has surpassed that of major cities in Japan and South Korea. This suggests that Taiwan’s housing challenge is not driven by exceptionally high rents, but by insufficient income to support them.
Notably, Taiwan’s rental pressure is highly concentrated. According to government statistics, the homeownership rate stands at 84.4%, with renters accounting for only 7.5% of households, far below the OECD average of approximately 24%. This indicates that rental stress is not evenly distributed across the population, but is disproportionately borne by urban residents and younger households.
From a longer-term perspective, Taiwan’s residential rent index has maintained an annual growth rate of around 4% in recent years, reflecting a steady upward trend. However, with wage growth remaining relatively constrained, the rent burden has shown little sign of easing. As housing costs absorb an increasing share of income, renters face reduced disposable income, limiting both consumption and long-term financial planning.

Ultimately, Taiwan’s housing issue is not that rents are the highest globally, but that the burden ratio is unusually elevated. When rent consistently accounts for 30% to 50% of income, housing ceases to be merely a living arrangement and becomes a structural constraint on consumption patterns and social mobility.






