Mitte Bezirk
Ortsteile in Mitte
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Mitte for expats
Mitte is the central Bezirk of Berlin and the one where the cost of being central is most visible. Land here is the highest-valued of any Berlin district, and about 90% of homes are rented. It packs the government quarter, Museum Island and Alexanderplatz into the same administrative unit, alongside heavy tourist flows.
If you want to live at the centre of Berlin and accept tourist density and high rents in exchange, this is the Bezirk that delivers it.
Land values are the highest of any Berlin Bezirk
Housing in Mitte sits at the top of the Berlin market. The premium reflects location more than space, since the Bezirk is dense and apartment-dominated rather than a place of houses and gardens.
Ownership is rare here, so most arrivals will be looking at the open rental market rather than buying. Average income per resident sits near β¬26k, which tempers the assumption that a central, expensive Bezirk is uniformly wealthy.
New construction is limited inside Mitte, which is already built-up. The land that exists is largely spoken for, and what does get built tends toward offices and high-value apartments rather than family housing.
Foreign-born residents number over a hundred thousand
Mitte is one of the most international parts of Berlin, with around 41% of residents born abroad.
EU-born residents number roughly 44.756, while those born outside the EU make up the larger share at about 100.234.
On top of residents, Mitte carries Berlin's densest tourist traffic, with the Brandenburg Gate, Museum Island and Alexanderplatz all inside its boundaries. Daily life in the historic core means sharing pavements and transit with visitors, which is part of the trade-off for being this central.
Wedding and Gesundbrunnen sit inside the same Bezirk
Mitte is not one neighbourhood. The historic, expensive core around the Reichstag and Museum Island shares an administrative unit with Wedding and Gesundbrunnen to the north, which are more working-class, more diverse and cheaper to rent in.
That split matters when reading any single figure for the Bezirk. One number for the whole area masks a real gap between the polished centre and the northern quarters, so two addresses with the same postcode prefix can feel like different places.
Households with children number around 39.557, and they are not evenly placed. Families are more common in the northern residential streets than in the museum-and-office centre.
Nearly sixty thousand businesses operate in the Bezirk
Mitte is a workplace as much as a residence. It holds around 57.849 businesses, the government quarter, and a concentration of offices, cultural institutions and hospitality that few other Bezirke match.
Transit here is dense rather than something you plan your day around. The Bezirk covers about 3.944 of land and is threaded with U-Bahn, S-Bahn, tram and bus lines, with Hauptbahnhof, Berlin's main station, on its edge.
Everyday services follow the density. The nearest daycare is typically about 0,2 km away, and shops, clinics and cultural venues are within walking distance for most addresses, which suits people who weight access over quiet.
Frequently asked questions
Is Mitte expensive to live in?
Yes. Mitte has the highest land value of any Berlin Bezirk, at roughly β¬2.733/mΒ². The north around Wedding is cheaper than the historic core, but the district figure sits at the top of the market.
What is the population of Mitte?
Mitte has a population of about 357.319, spread across roughly 205.001 households. Most of those are people living alone, with single-person households the dominant type in the central core.
Do many families live in Mitte?
Family households are a minority of the roughly 131.301 single-person households that dominate the centre. Children are more common in the northern streets of Wedding and Gesundbrunnen than around the museums and offices.
Can I buy property in Mitte?
Most people rent. Single-family houses make up only about 6% of the stock, and buying is costly given land values are the highest in Berlin. New, ownable construction inside the built-up core is limited.
What is there to do for work in Mitte?
The Bezirk holds the federal government quarter alongside a high share of Berlin high earners, at about 8% of residents. Offices, cultural institutions and hospitality are concentrated here. It is one of Berlin's primary employment centres rather than a commuter suburb.
How big is Mitte?
Mitte covers a central stretch of Berlin and is densely built and apartment-dominated. Newer homes account for only about 8% of the stock, with little room left to build inside the core. Transit links are extensive across the whole area.
