Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With 300-400k HHI. People here think you could only afford a 1 million house with that income. Why is there such a disparity?
they are not on 300-400k HHI
an engineering manager in early 30s at Airbnb can make near $1M in total compensation
300-400k HHI is like entry level package for people working at facebook/google
Anonymous wrote:I live in SF. They are house-poor. It means they sank all their money into their house, so can't afford to do anything else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same way 'people' in NYC are able to buy 2-3 million condos. Start off with a larger base income with all the lawyers and financiers present, otherwise the rest of the buyers are independently wealthy or the top 5% in their respective fields like fashion, publicity etc.
There's also the fact that 65% of the people living in New York City rent. That's roughly 5 million people renting for their entire lives. 1/5th of those renters have a household income over $150,000.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/15/realestate/rent-increases-2017.html
https://www.rentcafe.com/blog/rental-market/new-york-high-income-renters/
All that to say - I believe people are vastly overlooking the fact that the broad majority of Bay Area dwellers or NYC dwellers just can't afford to buy at all.
Every person I know who is living in NY and hadn’t bought, can’t afford to do so. Even those making 500k plus. They live such fancy and high consumption lifestyles that they are unable to save the 20-50 percent needed for a downpayment. They act as though renting is easier:better deal but we know that’s not why they are still renting.