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    Housing in Tallinn: A Founder's Guide

    Tailored for Tallinn

    Tallinn is one of Europe's most affordable tech hubs. A room in a shared flat runs €500–€800/mo. Kalamaja and Telliskivi are the startup heartland; Kopli is up-and-coming with lower rent. Coliving, flat shares, and the move-in playbook for Tallinn.

    The Housing Landscape in Tallinn

    Coliving has exploded across Europe and is tailor-made for founders — you get a furnished room, a built-in network, and zero friction. Budget accordingly for your city.

    Platforms & Neighborhoods

    Each city has its own platforms and cultural norms. Here's what works in Tallinn. For curated links to platforms and coliving, see the Tallinn playbook on the main page.

    • KV.ee is Estonia's main property portal — most complete database; set up alerts. City24.ee and Rendin also strong
    • Telliskivi & Kalamaja — the startup neighborhood. LIFT99 is here, surrounded by cafes and street art. Walking distance to Old Town
    • Kopli — up-and-coming, cheaper rents, creative community. Rotermann Quarter and Ülemiste City for central/tech campus
    • Facebook groups: Expats in Tallinn/Estonia and Korterite üürimine Tallinnas (direct-from-owner, skip broker fees)

    Coliving: The Founder's Secret Weapon

    Coliving isn't just convenient — it's strategic. You're living with other founders, remote workers, and builders. The networking happens over breakfast, not at awkward meetups.

    Most coliving operators offer month-to-month leases, which is perfect when you're still figuring out which city is home.

    • LIFT99 — coworking and community in Telliskivi; 24/7 access.
    • Workland has five locations across Tallinn; Spaces (Rotermann) for corporate feel.
    • Facebook groups: Expats in Tallinn/Estonia and Korterite üürimine Tallinnas for direct-from-owner listings, skip broker fees.
    • Outsite — Lisbon, Berlin, and more. Strong remote-worker community.
    • For curated links, see the Tallinn playbook on the main page.

    The Move-In Playbook

    Whether you're doing coliving or a traditional rental, here's the step-by-step playbook to get settled fast.

    • Book a temporary stay (Airbnb or hostel) for your first 2 weeks — don't sign a lease sight-unseen
    • Get a local SIM card on day 1 — most landlords only respond to local numbers
    • Open a local bank account ASAP (Revolut or N26 work across Europe as a bridge)
    • Register your address — required for banking, contracts, and visa steps
    • Bring translated documents: employment contract or proof of income, passport copies, previous landlord reference
    • Budget for a deposit of 1–3 months rent, plus first month upfront

    Common Mistakes to Avoid

    Founders moving to Europe consistently make the same housing mistakes. Avoid these and you'll save weeks of stress.

    • Don't pay deposits via wire transfer to strangers — scams are rampant on Facebook groups
    • Don't overcommit to a 12-month lease in your first city — try coliving or a 3-month sublet first
    • Don't ignore furnished options — buying furniture in a city you might leave in 6 months is a waste
    The Ultimate Europe Housing Guide for Founders (Tallinn) | Just Move to Europe