Tack så mycket.Depending on where you settle, the public transportation may or may not be good. You will propbabaly have buses, but if you live in a more rural place, maybe you will have 1 bus per hour during daytime if even that. If you live in a city, well, then you should have much better transportation options.
If you have to buy a car, then be advised that they are quite expensive if you are buying newer ones (When I bough my car last year, a 2021-moel Volkswagen T-Roc that had only done 25000 KM, I ended up paying slight more than 200 000 SEK for it. Sure you could get a 10+ yearold beaten up car with loads of miles on it for maybe 70 000, but then you would have to budget for paying a mechanic a lot of money, as things would probably break) . Add expensive insurance and prices for fuel... Like 95 octane gasoline costs at the moment about 16 SEK/Liter. I think when it was as its most expensive it was 23 SEK/liter...
A new Kia Soul here is something like 21K USD, so thats not too terrible honestly.
Those obnoxious big ass F150 trucks everyone drives where I live start at 47K USD but somehow the hillbillies all buy them anyways, but gas is cheap (3 dollars per gallon right now? Its basically the same price as milk over here)
I really really want to get to a point where we don't need a car for a host of reasons but that obviously limits locations.
And for comparison, where we live currently literally has no public transportation. Of any kind

