Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf Bezirk
Ortsteile in Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf
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Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf for expats
Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf is the classic western face of Berlin, a settled and relatively affluent Bezirk of 317.006 residents that kept its bourgeois character through the decades when the eastern districts reinvented themselves. The Kurfürstendamm runs through it as the city's traditional shopping boulevard, with the KaDeWe department store nearby and the grounds of Schloss Charlottenburg in the north. Housing here leans heavily on pre-war Altbau apartments, and the international presence is long-established rather than recent. It feels more orderly and conventional than Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf's eastern counterparts, and it costs accordingly.
Built for settled professionals and families who want a calmer, traditional West Berlin and can carry the cost.
A pre-war Altbau district that stayed bourgeois through the divided years
Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf is the part of Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf that least resembles the cliche of edgy Berlin. As West Berlin's established core it kept stucco-fronted Altbau streets, embassies, and a middle-class population, and renting still dominates with about 81% of homes leased rather than owned.
The building stock is old and largely intact. New construction is marginal here, at roughly 3% of the stock, so most flats sit behind pre-war facades with high ceilings and the maintenance bills that come with them.
Detached and single-family housing is rare in this dense western grid, making up around 12% of homes. The texture is apartment living, in solid older blocks rather than the suburban houses found at the city's outer edges.
The Kurfürstendamm, KaDeWe, and 54,432 registered businesses
Work and shopping cluster along the Kurfürstendamm, the boulevard that anchored West Berlin commerce when the centre lay behind the Wall. The Bezirk carries a deep commercial base, with 54.432 businesses registered across retail, professional services, and media.
The economy here is white-collar and steady rather than startup-driven. Average income per resident sits near €28k, and the share of high-income households reaches about 10%, both above what most eastern Bezirke show.
The international layer is settled, not transient, with about 28% of residents born abroad. Census figures put those born inside the EU at 26.054, a long-standing mix tied to the embassies, universities, and businesses that have sat in the west for generations.
Schloss Charlottenburg, the Grunewald forest, and 2,679 hectares of land
Green space here is formal and forested rather than the converted-airfield kind found further east. The Bezirk spans about 2.679 hectares, with the baroque grounds of Schloss Charlottenburg in the north and the Grunewald forest spilling along its western edge toward the lakes.
That forest edge and the Wannsee-side water give the western fringe a quieter, leafier feel than the dense Altbau streets around the Ku'damm. The contrast within the Bezirk is sharp, from boulevard bustle to woodland within a few S-Bahn stops on the U7 line.
Day-to-day services sit close for families. The average distance to a daycare is roughly 0,2 km, and of the area's households 34.389 include children, a base that sustains schools and family services across the district.
Land values near a citywide high and a single-person majority
The price of the western calm is cost. Land values in the Bezirk run high by Berlin standards, averaging around €1.941/m², which keeps the open-market flat search competitive even though demand is less frantic than in the trendiest eastern quarters.
The household mix is heavily single. Of 187.482 households, 120.250 are one-person, which holds demand for Altbau studios and small flats firm and bids up the more reachable corners.
The other side of the trade is atmosphere. This is one of the most traditional of Berlin's 12 Bezirke, lower-key, with less of the nightlife and creative churn that draws people to districts like Friedrichshain or Neukolln, which suits some arrivals and leaves others wanting the busier east.
Frequently asked questions
What kind of district is Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf?
It is the classic established west of Berlin, home to about 317,000 people and built around the Kurfürstendamm shopping boulevard. The feel is traditional and bourgeois, calmer than the eastern Bezirke.
Is housing expensive here?
Yes, by Berlin standards. Land values average around 1,941 euros per square metre, among the higher figures in the city, and the stock is dominated by pre-war Altbau flats. Roughly four in five homes are rented rather than owned.
How international is the area?
Long-established rather than newly arrived. Around 28 percent of residents were born abroad, including 63.140 born outside the EU, tied to the embassies and universities that have sat in the west for generations.
Is it a good area for families?
Many families settle here for the order and green space. The average distance to a daycare is roughly 0.15 kilometres, and the Grunewald forest and Schloss Charlottenburg grounds sit within the Bezirk's 2,679 hectares.
What is the job and business scene like?
It is white-collar and steady, with 54,432 businesses across retail, professional services, and media. Average income per resident sits near 28,000 euros, above most eastern districts.
Does it have much nightlife?
Less than the eastern districts. The character is traditional and residential, with shopping along the Ku'damm and the KaDeWe nearby rather than the club scene of Friedrichshain. About 10 percent of households are high-income, which shapes the tone.
