As foreign capital floods into hospitality projects across the city, economic data suggests the visitor economy is reshaping Berlin's financial landscape in ways that extend far beyond hotel occupancy rates.
As housing and everyday expenses surge across the capital, employers are discovering that talent retention now hinges on wages that outpace traditional Berlin salaries.
As delivery-only restaurants proliferate across Friedrichshain and Kreuzberg, traditional F&B employers are retooling hiring strategies—creating demand for new skills but threatening heritage venues.
From Mitte's tech startups to Kreuzberg's import firms, Berlin entrepreneurs are recalibrating supply chains and risk strategies as geopolitical tensions reshape international commerce.
As inflation persists and foot traffic declines, entrepreneurs across Kreuzberg and Charlottenburg struggle to stay afloat in a city that once promised unlimited opportunity.
As demand for flexible, sustainable workspace surges, a local property entrepreneur is betting big on mixed-use developments across Kreuzberg and Friedrichshain.
As innovation districts expand from Kreuzberg to Prenzlauer Berg, tech talent has become the city's most contested commodity, forcing traditional employers to compete harder than ever.
Rising operational costs and shifting investor appetite are reshaping Berlin's innovation landscape—here's what the data reveals about survival and scaling.
Post-pandemic recovery has transformed the visitor economy into a goldmine, but success increasingly depends on which side of the digital divide hospitality entrepreneurs find themselves.
As rents spiral across the capital, entrepreneur Clara Mendez's PropEquity platform is democratising property investment for ordinary Berliners—and proving there's profitable business in solving the city's housing crisis.
As major employers abandon traditional headquarters, Berlin's job market is fracturing into competing clusters—and workers are gaining leverage like never before.
As supply chains fracture and tariffs reshape international commerce, everyday goods—and prices—in Berlin are changing faster than most residents realize.
As specialist startups multiply across Kreuzberg and Friedrichshain, traditional hiring practices give way to portfolio-driven recruitment, forcing established firms to rethink how they compete for skilled workers.
Rising rents and falling real wages are pushing skilled workers out of the city, leaving employers scrambling to compete for a shrinking pool of affordable talent.
As corporations ditch sprawling traditional offices for flexible workspace solutions, a new class of landlords and operators is reshaping the city's commercial landscape—and reaping significant returns.