I sincerely doubt the whole story is being presented and being a part time teacher in a country that taxes you upwards of 70% of your income bought that. These idiots act like that is the only acceptable explanation.
That house isn't his registered address and good for him, there's no wheelchair ramp in sight and wheelies love rolling over gravel! It's possible that's a school/home for violent tards or unaccompanied youth. Or it's his parents house.
His actual address is around here in this area of hastily constructed kit houses.
This is his house specifically
Like Brianna Wu would say, they're made from scratch, just pour the foundation and assemble the prefab pieces!
His name is also
von Agnar so he's likely getting paid a good salary by Mom&Dad LLC. In my experience over the years those fuckers from old aristocrat families get more money from their parents annually than they get from working, that money isn't taxed either so it is a significant chunk of money. If he got $6,000 a month from his parents that would be the equivalent of a monthly income of $14,000 before taxes. Working is a condition for getting all that free money though and that doesn't foster a good work ethic so people like that are completely useless.
He's also got a wife/girlfriend who is a full time teacher and every Swedish teacher will complain about their low salaries.
Average salary for a fulltime high school teacher is 38 573 SEK per month, that translates to 4650 USD. Which is misleading, the dollar is incredibly weak right now and dividing SEK by 10 is generally a more accurate representation, so $3850 per month. Then there's taxes. Then there's 25% VAT on all goods and services. There's also a social security fee that is 30% of the pre-tax salary, an invisible tax that only employers see. All of that averages out to 27,500 per month in taxes, leaving 23,500 SEK which when divided by 10 means $2350 in disposable income before fixed costs like rent/mortgage. 1½ teacher salaries is not Porsche as a secondary car money.
Where does all that tax money go? No one knows, certainly not to schools or teachers salaries.