No one thinks stupid is confined to the old. People of all ages can be short-sighted or weirdo conservatives. There are no liberals anywhere who are crying over people moving to FL or Texas. Go ahead. Let's confine the crazy. Cluster together down in your sweltering summers, imminent flooding and God-awful politics. Buh-bye. |
I can get that whole list for $650K a 15-20 minute drive from downtown DC, why would I want it in Tampa? |
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Why would anyone want to live in Florida, is beyond me. I'd rather live in about 48 other states.
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I am appalled by the cookie cutter houses going up rather than 'saving'/remodeling the older houses with charm. |
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I’m from Miami, born and raised. Lived in California for 6 years, came back to FL and was there for a grand total of 5 months. I’m now in DC. It’s gotten so incredibly expensive to rent in south Florida (equal to LA prices) and the wages do not match the cost of living. Mostly because a lot of the population is not educated and the main industry in Florida is tourism, which is not high paying but increases the demand for housing, leaving locals unable to afford housing.
Florida is basically a huge, overblown suburb. If you’re from California, the entire state of Florida is exactly like the Inland Empire. Think Riverside, San Bernardino, Fontana, Marietta, Rancho etc. It is hugely suburban and overpopulated. Traffic jams in the suburbs, crowds everywhere, big box stores everywhere, without the benefit of actually living close to a big city. It’s overpopulated and does not have the infrastructure to support it. |
Personally I’d rather be closer to Tampa than DC. Tampa is booming and there are more outdoor activities. There is a lot of crime and homelessness in DC. |
You've obviously never been to North Dakota, Mississippi or Nebraska. |
Sounds just like MoCo and Fairfax to me. |
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The majority of people moving to Florida are doing so because they need to. I gladly pay 60k+ a year in taxes to MD/Moco. I can afford the pleasure of not needing to save that $60k to live near a bunch of three toothed Neanderthals.
I am hardly a raging liberal..I just hate stupid people. |
Wealth was always in FL, rich have multiple homes, they don't "relocate". FL had some of the most expensive compounds in the country where home prices start at 10 mil, and there are many of them on both FL coasts. So what? Movement of working people who are upwardly mobile is what matters, not obscenely rich people buying their 4th vacation homes in some enclave conveniently located near nicer nature and luxury shopping and supply of household staff employees that tend to be not upwardly mobile. FL experienced migration of those who come there to settle down and work and have higher incomes, this is what drove prices up. It happened during the pandemic because Blue metro areas became unbearable to live in, so people who wanted sense of normalcy and had flexibility moved, and also saved some on cost of housing, COL, etc. But it no longer makes sense if prices are up, it's not longer a "grass is greener" pasture for those seeking lower COL. Political migration will probably continue, but economic migration of upwardly mobile will slow down when prices hit a threshold where staying in your own high COL area would be the same. |
Also a lot of well to do East Coasters got second homes in FL to escape when they could work from home and when rates were obscenely low and prices still affordable. Many had to return back to their primary residences when their employers wanted them back to the office or when they simply got bored, missed their old surroundings, families, friends. You would think with departure of those using FL as tax shelter and second home would result in more homes on the market and will drive prices down, but it didn't. People who bought in 2020 with low rates and prices have now doubled their money, have low mtg and aren't selling even if not living there full time. So, inventory continues to be tight and prices high. |
Davis Island? Bayshore? Those have always been expensive. That’s like tossing out Kalamora townhouse as the typical DC home. |
I used to live in LA, and DC metro sometimes reminds me of LA with its interconnected "villages" and dispersed town centers, busy highways and general car dependency outside of the core of DC or more developed towns like Arlington/Rosslyn/Alexandria. There are also similarities in culture.. It's typical affluent suburbia. South FL has Miami and we have DC.. both are cities and provide good enough urban amenities and culture, interesting architecture, and nature (although Miami has great beaches, which is hard to beat). I still think DC had more big city amenities than Miami and is a lot less car dependent. While I love Miami, I cannot help but perceive it as a vacation destination more so, than a place where I would live permanently. We visited more residential parts like Coconut Grove, Coral Gables, etc, and found it not that much more enticing or interesting as any other nice suburb of any other major city, except warmer weather and proximity to beaches. There are cute strips of shopping/dining, but nothing you cannot find anywhere else. I don't see Coconut Grove being anything better than Bethesda, if housing price is the same, there is little advantage to move there, unless you love hot weather and driving to the beach on the weekend. |
There were always rich enclaves in FL, because it's a vacation destination. |
North Dakota is beautiful. Nebraska can be fine. Agree with you on Mississippi. But Florida is still a swampy sinkhole hellhole. Hard pass. |