Tiny Lapland village is paying families £742 to move there – but there’s a catch --[Reported by Umva mag]

A TINY village in Swedish Lapland is offering to pay people to move there, but there’s one little snag – you’ll need to have a child. Located in northern Sweden, the number of residents in Glommersträsk has been slowly declining for the last 70 years. AlamyGlommersträsk is paying families to move there[/caption] Roughly 1,000 people lived in Glommersträsk in 1950, but now the village only has 200 residents. And with just 23 primary school-aged children in the village, its local school may soon close. This would follow the closure of Glommersträsk high school, which closed in 2009 because of the dwindling population. In a bid to attract young families to the village, the local council is offering to pay people 10,000 Swedish Krona (£742) to move there. Families will need children aged between 6 and 15 to be eligible to participate in the scheme, and only the first five families who move to the village will be able to claim the cash incentive. Children will also need to spend one academic year at the primary school to qualify. The Glommersbygdens Framtid Group (a local authority) will help families find housing and work in the area. While British families can apply, they must obtain a Swedish residence permit first. A spokesperson for Glommersbygdens Framtid described Glommersträsk as “a safe space where your children can grow up in a nice community” to Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter. One family has already moved to the Swedish village, with another applying under the scheme. Local authorities hope more people will apply to move to Glommersträsk under the scheme. Glommersträsk is a two-hour drive from Luleå, a coastal city in northern Sweden. There, visitors will be able to go on an island-hopping cruise of the Luleå archipelago. Home to more than 1,312 ever-changing islands, with visitors able to sometimes able to have an entire island to themselves. Other attractions in Luleå include Teknikens Hus, a science centre where visitors can operate a truck, a train, a snow-scooter, a timber loader or an airplane If the chilly winters aren’t your thing, there are plenty of other places across Europe trying to entice more residents with cash schemes. Antikythera, Greece The island of Antikythera is looking for more people to live there, as the younger population flock to busier Greek islands for better job prospects. Located between Crete and Kythira, it is 45 minutes by plane from Athens. The island is offering new residents €500 (£450) per month for three years, working out to £16,200 over the three years. Candela, Italy Candela, a tiny town in Puglia, is offering up to €2,000 (£1,800) for people to move there, following a dip in its population. The Italian town reportedly offers €800 (£723) for single people, €1,200 (£1,085) for couples, up to €1,800 (£1,600) for three-person families and €2,000 (£1,800) for four-person families. You’ll need to become a resident to move to Candela and you must rent a house in the town too. Sicily, Italy Sicily routinely sells homes for just €1 (90p), with the only catch being the amount you need to spend to renovate them. While they’re not quite giving you money, they are giving a huge discount on homes. My View - Visiting Lapland is a trip of a lifetime LAPLAND spans across the northern tip of Norway, Sweden and Finland, meaning it’s not somewhere you visit just once. I’ve been fortunate enough to visit Finnish Lapland twice, with my most recent trip taking place last December. On my whistle-stop tour through Finland, I managed to squeeze in an afternoon in Rovaniemi. Home to the world-famous Santa Claus Village, there’s lots to keep families entertained from meet-and-greets with the big man himself to husky rides through the Finnish countryside. Its biggest draw certainly has to be the prospect of seeing the Northern Lights. Spotting the Northern Lights is never promised – it is a natural phenomenon after all – but holidaymakers head to Lapland with the hope they’ll be able to glimpse the Aurora. Even with the light pollution, I was lucky enough to watch the lights dance in the sky above the city. It’s an experience I will never forget. by Hope Brotherton If you fancy starting up a business abroad, Ireland, Mauritius, and Chile all have programmes offering grants up to £40,000 to help you get your feet off the ground. One couple recently bought an Italian townhouse at auction with € 1 and transformed it into an amazing holiday home. AlamyFamilies will need to have school-aged children to apply[/caption]

Sep 19, 2024 - 18:27
Tiny Lapland village is paying families £742 to move there – but there’s a catch --[Reported by Umva mag]

A TINY village in Swedish Lapland is offering to pay people to move there, but there’s one little snag – you’ll need to have a child.

Located in northern Sweden, the number of residents in Glommersträsk has been slowly declining for the last 70 years.

a snowy landscape with a wooden house in the foreground
Alamy
Glommersträsk is paying families to move there[/caption]

Roughly 1,000 people lived in Glommersträsk in 1950, but now the village only has 200 residents.

And with just 23 primary school-aged children in the village, its local school may soon close.

This would follow the closure of Glommersträsk high school, which closed in 2009 because of the dwindling population.

In a bid to attract young families to the village, the local council is offering to pay people 10,000 Swedish Krona (£742) to move there.

Families will need children aged between 6 and 15 to be eligible to participate in the scheme, and only the first five families who move to the village will be able to claim the cash incentive.

Children will also need to spend one academic year at the primary school to qualify.

The Glommersbygdens Framtid Group (a local authority) will help families find housing and work in the area.

While British families can apply, they must obtain a Swedish residence permit first.

A spokesperson for Glommersbygdens Framtid described Glommersträsk as “a safe space where your children can grow up in a nice community” to Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter.

One family has already moved to the Swedish village, with another applying under the scheme.

Local authorities hope more people will apply to move to Glommersträsk under the scheme.

Glommersträsk is a two-hour drive from Luleå, a coastal city in northern Sweden.

There, visitors will be able to go on an island-hopping cruise of the Luleå archipelago.

Home to more than 1,312 ever-changing islands, with visitors able to sometimes able to have an entire island to themselves.

Other attractions in Luleå include Teknikens Hus, a science centre where visitors can operate a truck, a train, a snow-scooter, a timber loader or an airplane

If the chilly winters aren’t your thing, there are plenty of other places across Europe trying to entice more residents with cash schemes.

Antikythera, Greece

The island of Antikythera is looking for more people to live there, as the younger population flock to busier Greek islands for better job prospects.

Located between Crete and Kythira, it is 45 minutes by plane from Athens.

The island is offering new residents €500 (£450) per month for three years, working out to £16,200 over the three years.

Candela, Italy

Candela, a tiny town in Puglia, is offering up to €2,000 (£1,800) for people to move there, following a dip in its population.

The Italian town reportedly offers €800 (£723) for single people, €1,200 (£1,085) for couples, up to €1,800 (£1,600) for three-person families and €2,000 (£1,800) for four-person families.

You’ll need to become a resident to move to Candela and you must rent a house in the town too.

Sicily, Italy

Sicily routinely sells homes for just €1 (90p), with the only catch being the amount you need to spend to renovate them.

While they’re not quite giving you money, they are giving a huge discount on homes.

My View - Visiting Lapland is a trip of a lifetime

LAPLAND spans across the northern tip of Norway, Sweden and Finland, meaning it’s not somewhere you visit just once.

I’ve been fortunate enough to visit Finnish Lapland twice, with my most recent trip taking place last December.

On my whistle-stop tour through Finland, I managed to squeeze in an afternoon in Rovaniemi.

Home to the world-famous Santa Claus Village, there’s lots to keep families entertained from meet-and-greets with the big man himself to husky rides through the Finnish countryside.

Its biggest draw certainly has to be the prospect of seeing the Northern Lights.

Spotting the Northern Lights is never promised – it is a natural phenomenon after all – but holidaymakers head to Lapland with the hope they’ll be able to glimpse the Aurora.

Even with the light pollution, I was lucky enough to watch the lights dance in the sky above the city. It’s an experience I will never forget.

by Hope Brotherton

If you fancy starting up a business abroad, Ireland, Mauritius, and Chile all have programmes offering grants up to £40,000 to help you get your feet off the ground.

One couple recently bought an Italian townhouse at auction with  1 and transformed it into an amazing holiday home.

a snowy landscape with trees and mountains in the background
Alamy
Families will need to have school-aged children to apply[/caption]




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