Living in Bergen
Bergen is densely built and genuinely urban, and this is apartment territory: only about 1 in 7 homes is a house.
At 8,244 residents per km² the buurt is busy without being packed.
Eindhoven's housing market rides the Brainport tech economy — ASML and its suppliers pull in international engineers on good salaries, and prices in family neighborhoods have risen accordingly. English-speaking buyers are common here, which shows in how listings are marketed.
The housing market in Bergen
The average home value (WOZ) in Bergen is €399,000, which puts it at #35 of 101 neighborhoods in Eindhoven — 13% above the city median. You pay for the location here. For scale: Eindhoven's cheapest buurt averages €144,000 and its most expensive €1,204,000, so Bergen sits in the middle band of the city.
Average WOZ value per year (CBS). The reference date lags the current market by ±1 year.
The direction of the market: between 2019 and 2025 the average WOZ value here rose from €282,000 to €408,000, up 45% — slower than the city as a whole (+57%). WOZ values lag the market by about a year, but the trend itself is reliable.
Here is the catch for buyers: only 32% of homes are owner-occupied, and 9% of the stock is social housing that never reaches the open market. Few homes come up for sale, so when one does, expect competition and act fast on viewings. The upside of the same number: neighborhoods with a big rental base tend to feel lively and transient rather than settled — decide which you want before you fall for a listing.
Who lives here
Demographically, Bergen is a young-adult neighborhood — the 25-to-45 group outnumbers everyone else (49% of its 2,835 residents), followed by 15-to-25 year olds at 18%. More than half of all households (66%) are single-person — this is a neighborhood of independents, not minivans. The average household counts 1.5 people.
As for who your neighbors would be: this is a neighborhood of contrasts — 53% of households sit in the lower national income bracket, yet the average income per resident is €42,000 a year. Social housing and expensive owner-occupied homes stand side by side here, which is common in Dutch inner cities.
Daily errands, coffee and dinner
Day to day: the nearest large supermarket is about 8 minutes' walk; with roughly 100 cafés and restaurants within a kilometer, you will never cook out of necessity.
The practical checklist most buyers forget to make: pharmacy 6 min walk · GP 6 min · hospital 3.1 km · library 1.4 km · 4 cinemas within 5 km. None of these will decide a purchase on their own, but a GP taking new patients nearby is the kind of thing you only miss after moving.
Families and schools
For families: the nearest primary school is 10 minutes on foot; daycare is 0.5 km away — check waiting lists early, they are long everywhere in the Netherlands; secondary school is a 5-minute bike ride, which Dutch teenagers do in all weather.
Getting around
Getting around: the station is a 9-minute cycle, standard Dutch commuting range; the nearest highway on-ramp is 3.7 km away; and at 0.5 cars per household, most residents simply don't own one — if you do, factor in permit costs and waiting lists before you buy.
Energy and running costs
92% of homes were built before 2000. Two identical-looking houses on the same street can differ by hundreds of euros a month once heating is counted — the energy label tells you which one you're looking at, and lenders increasingly price it into your mortgage too.
Before you bid in Bergen
Before you bid in Bergen: listings are scarce here, which pushes bidding above asking more often — decide your maximum before the viewing, not during it.
None of these averages can tell you whether the specific house you found is fairly priced — that depends on its size, energy label, state of maintenance and the recent sales around it. That is exactly what a free HomeReview report checks, in about 10 seconds, for any Dutch address.
Frequently asked questions
Is Bergen a good neighborhood to live in?
That depends on what you're looking for. Bergen suits buyers after city buzz best; it's a weaker match for families with children and buyers after peace and space. The average home value is €399,000 (13% above the Eindhoven median) and the neighborhood has 2,835 residents. Ultimately the specific street and home matter more than the neighborhood average.
What is the average home value in Bergen?
The average home value (WOZ waarde) in Bergen, Eindhoven is €399,000, based on the official CBS neighborhood statistics.
Is Bergen mostly owner-occupied or rental?
32% of homes in Bergen are owner-occupied and 68% are rentals, of which 9% of all homes are social housing (woningcorporatie).
Are house prices in Bergen rising?
Between 2019 and 2025 the average WOZ value in Bergen rose from €282,000 to €408,000 (+45%); Eindhoven as a whole moved up 57% over the same period. WOZ values lag the current market by about a year.
How old are the homes in Bergen?
92% of homes in Bergen were built before 2000 and 8% after. Older buildings can mean higher maintenance and energy costs — check the energy label before bidding.
How far is the nearest train station from Bergen?
The average distance to a train station from Bergen is 2.2 km; a large supermarket is 0.7 km away on average.
Is Bergen an expensive part of Eindhoven?
Yes — average home values in Bergen are 13% above the Eindhoven median, so budget for competition and possible overbidding.
Is Bergen good for families with children?
The nearest primary school is 0.8 km away and there are 2 daycare locations within a kilometer. 9% of households here have children at home.
Similar neighborhoods in Eindhoven
Closest in price — worth a look if Bergen is out of reach or you want alternatives.
Source: CBS Kerncijfers wijken en buurten (buurt BU07721120) · Data updated 2026-07-11. WOZ values are neighborhood averages; individual homes vary.