Why it seems impossible to buy your first home

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...y-it-seems-impossible-to-buy-your-first-home/
Why it seems impossible to buy your first home





By Emily Badger March 22 at 6:30 AM

(J.J. Alcantara/The Washington Post; iStock)


A starter home is supposed to be an entry point into the market: a modest property, maybe a two-bed, one-bath, a place a young couple could buy into before all the pets and kids and seldom-used kitchen appliances come along.

Buy a starter home, if all goes well, and you position yourself later to trade up. A starter home helps make possible a second home, which makes possible maybe a third even grander one somewhere down the line.

But what happens when the most affordable entry-level housing on the market costs $700,000?

Okay, that's an extreme example (it's from metro San Francisco). But across the country, the list prices of starter homes have been rapidly rising, running away from what would be remotely possible on the kind of incomes that could traditionally buy you such properties. In metropolitan Oakland, the median list price for a starter home is up 104 percent sine 2012, according to a Trulia analysis. In Denver, it's up 78 percent. In Portland, 50 percent. In metro Washington, 37 percent.

These prices are soaring, in part, because starter homes are some of the rarer creatures on the market now:
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According to Trulia chief economist Ralph McLaughlin, the number of starter homes on the market in the 100 largest U.S. metros has dropped by about 44 percent since 2012. That inventory has been shrinking at a faster rate than has been the case for mid-tier and premium homes, when you divide a metro's housing stock into these three categories (McLaughlin defines "starter homes" as the bottom third of the stock by home value, not physical size).
After the housing crash, investors bought up many foreclosed homes and converted them into rentals, so that has eaten away at some of the available starter-home stock. And people who currently own starter homes who remain underwater on their mortgages can't sell, which keeps their homes off the market, too. But a big part of the problem here has to do with what's happening further up the housing ladder.

In markets like Oakland, Portland and Washington, the prices for high-end homes are rapidly rising — the rungs of the ladder are moving farther apart — and that makes it harder for people who own mid-tier homes to trade up. And when they get stuck, people who own starter homes have a harder time trading up, too.

Rising prices also mean that buyers have to settle for smaller homes. So now we have buyers who could have afforded something nicer five years ago competing for what should be starter homes. We have people in San Francisco shelling out $700,000 for cramped condos.

Economists generally say you should spend no more than a third of your income on housing. In metro San Francisco, a family with a median starter income (among homeowners in the lower third of the region's income distribution) would have to pay 110 percent of their income on mortgage payments to afford a median starter home on the market today.

"So obviously starter-home households are not buying starter homes," McLaughlin says of the Bay Area. Richer households are. And this is another illustration of how different segments of the market influence each other. "Who bears the brunt of that downward pressure on the ladder? Well, it’s starter homebuyers.


They get squeezed out."


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The implications of this ripple out in many directions. Young homebuyers who are really committed to buying their first home may have to move to another region to do so (you can buy in El Paso a lot more house for half the money than you can in San Francisco). Or people who'd like to buy remain renters instead, adding more pressure to historically tight rental markets. In the long-term, renters who can't afford to become homeowners also postpone the ability to create wealth through housing, which could impact other financial decisions later in life.

When starter homes are out of reach of residents with modest incomes in places like Oakland or Portland, that also means those people who are squeezed out of the ownership market remain vulnerable to worsening affordability and displacement. Whether or not you believe in the other virtues of homeownership, it's a better bulwark against rising property values than renting.
 
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Living in california sucks, thats for sure. Im actually looking for a place to rent for myself, like a studio apartment or something below 1k a month.
 
I just bought my home using the VA Loan. I would not have been able to afford to buy otherwise. My sisters both will be long term renters even though they would very much like to buy... Shitty market.

But I am happy I bought. My mortgage is less than what I was paying in rent and im getting equity plus the mortgage interest deduction on taxes. In a few years I will have substantial equity even if the housing market is flat.

Owning beats renting all day IMO
 
Owning beats renting all day IMO

When we sold my grandfathers house,
which he built with his bare hands,
we were paying the amount he paid in 1950
to buy the lot and the materials to build the home

every 6 months in property tax.
 
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When we sold my grandfathers house
we were paying the amount he paid in 1950
to buy the lot and the materials to build the home

every 6 months in property tax.

That sounds about right. Thanks a lot, Federal Fucking Reserve...
 
I remember saving to buy property and build our first house. It took 5 years. We both worked full time and I worked a second part time job, one day a week. I recall that we grossed around $15K, combined, plus side job cash income. We took no vacations. We lived in a tiny 4 room rented house for cheap. We never dined out. We had a 7" B&W TV that we won in a no-cost raffle. We had no cable. I walked to work the first year as I had no car, even though I could easily have assumed a car loan and bought whatever car I wanted. I bought the lowest priced car in America with no options.

We saved a LOT of money, nearly our entire income. We bought 3 acres in the next county and built a very nice 1500 S.F. ranch. Mortgage rate was 11-3/4% and climbing. People said we were "lucky" to have such a "low rate". We only had to borrow a small amount because we had such a large lump of saved cash.

It was extraordinary for those days as well as it would be today. No one believed we did what we did because neither of us earned much money and everyone has cable, a spiffy car, dines out occasionally, takes a vacation every year, goes fishing, hunting, golfing, has her hair done and does lunch, right?

There are always options. There are far more options today than there were for us in the no more gold standard, stagflation-plagued, maniacally high interest rates, worst recession since the Great Depression late 70s-early 80s.

My nephew just bought his own place. It only took him 3 years to go from broke a$$ hipster rufus to cash-rich house hunter. Reasonable dwelling, compact gas sipper car, low rate mortgage, instant equity in a hard asset. He, as we were back when, is also in his late 20s.

YMMV.
 
Yeah, I'm really torn on this. After being a "homeowner" and now a renter, I'm not sure there's any real long term economic reasons to pay both the State and the Banks.

My home is part of my retirement plan. What do you get when you rent? A roof over your head.

What do you get when you own? A roof over your head plus an asset with value you can later sell if necessary. Also when the mortgage is paid off your "rent" drops significantly. In my case, my disposable income increased about 25- 30% because I was no longer making any payments. Now I need less money to live on- I just got an effective large wage increase. Besides having a property worth a few hundred thousand dollars. If I rented, I get no raise, no lower expenses, no few hundred thousand $ asset. I would just be giving that money away. And rent usually goes up- meaning higher costs in the future- not lower costs.

Yes- you do pay property taxes. Renting you are paying property taxes too- it is in the rental rate. You are spending the money anyways- might as well get something for it. With rent, you never get that drop in expenses later on. You never have that asset you can sell for more money if you want/ need to. Renting is giving money away.
 
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Read the Deed of Trust that everyone signs (without reading) when putting themselves on the hook for a mortgage. It says right in the Deed of Trust that the "buyer" is a TENANT. A mortgage is nothing but a realllllly long lease from the banker landlords.
 
People who are saying you never really own it are right on that point, but middlemen almost always add a whole lot to costs and can cause huge headaches and annoyances on top of what the govt already deals out.
 
As usual, the article ignores the big picture. It focuses on the supply side of the equation. Of course there is very little new supply in an urban area with no open space left to build on. San Francisco is a peninsula, and it's filled, as is most of the surrounding urban and suburban area. Sure, a shopping center can be demolished and mid-rise condos can be built, but that can only increase the supply so much.

They ignore the demand part of the equation. It's population growth, mostly fueled by immigration. And many of those immigrants are relatively wealthy, who pay cash for a $2 million dollar homes. It's increasing demand for a limited commodity that puts housing out of reach for many.

And for the long term view of housing in America, look no further than the debt industry. If they had not convinced all of America that going into massive debt was a good thing, the prices would not have gone as high over the years. Debt drives price inflation, especially when it is very specifically targeted at housing. This has been progressing over the generations. Your grandparents would never consider taking out the loans that people routinely take out today to purchase a home.
 
After the housing crash, investors bought up many foreclosed homes and converted them into rentals,

Yeah. Searching the forums you'll see that I was bitching about this when it was happening. The bailouts were just another transfer of wealth from the lower class to the upper class.

Germany is like this - you have to be in the upper 10% of income earners to actually be able to own property. Everybody else rents. And it isn't cheap, either.
 
I agree that you never own a home, car, etc. BUT, you can use the equity in same vs rent/lease options. If you're smart enough, that's BIG.
 
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