Anonymous wrote:Rather than climb the ladder we will wait for the forever big home. Sorry please tear down those little homes and ensure you provide recently renovated or new larger homes
https://www.newsweek.com/gen-z-millennials-dont-want-buy-starter-homes-2069778
Anonymous wrote:Lol, I'd love to be able to afford a "small starter home". We are two working professionals in NW DC and those homes start at $1.5M.
Anonymous wrote:Lol, I'd love to be able to afford a "small starter home". We are two working professionals in NW DC and those homes start at $1.5M.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite all the btching, millennials are the richest generation in history. And they don't give a fck about having kids, so that expense is out of the way. They want big houses and nice cars. Millennials are just Boomers 2.0.
Only a small percentage of millennials are wealthy though bc the income gap is the greatest it’s ever been w this generation.
PP, and I agree. And they're demanding big houses. For all the supposed hate between the millennials and boomers, history is definitely rhyming with their extravagant tastes and puerile entitlement.
I guess my point was that the majority of millennials cannot afford even a starter home because of this extreme income inequality and the ones in this generation who are “demanding” and “entitled” are a very small percentage of millennials. Also, millennials are ages 29-44 now and most are struggling financially even though they’ve been out of college and working for many years at this point. They are Not just starting out their adult lives—that would be gen z.
Tell them to get off their phones and get a better job and a second job. Save, live frugally and they can buy a house.
Oh yes Grandpa, that $2.50 a day they will save giving up coffee will surely make up the $1,500,000 difference in price between when you bought your house and now...
My cousin and her friends spend $30 a day or more on coffee, breakfast and lunch. Could easily add up to $900 in a month.
Wow, your cousin and her friends do it, that means all millenials must also, right?
And even if your one-off unsourced example did happen to be true for all millennials, $900/mo equals about $140,000 at current mortgage rates. Care to show me a DC area property you'd be OK living in that costs $140,000?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite all the btching, millennials are the richest generation in history. And they don't give a fck about having kids, so that expense is out of the way. They want big houses and nice cars. Millennials are just Boomers 2.0.
Only a small percentage of millennials are wealthy though bc the income gap is the greatest it’s ever been w this generation.
PP, and I agree. And they're demanding big houses. For all the supposed hate between the millennials and boomers, history is definitely rhyming with their extravagant tastes and puerile entitlement.
I guess my point was that the majority of millennials cannot afford even a starter home because of this extreme income inequality and the ones in this generation who are “demanding” and “entitled” are a very small percentage of millennials. Also, millennials are ages 29-44 now and most are struggling financially even though they’ve been out of college and working for many years at this point. They are Not just starting out their adult lives—that would be gen z.
Tell them to get off their phones and get a better job and a second job. Save, live frugally and they can buy a house.
Oh yes Grandpa, that $2.50 a day they will save giving up coffee will surely make up the $1,500,000 difference in price between when you bought your house and now...
My cousin and her friends spend $30 a day or more on coffee, breakfast and lunch. Could easily add up to $900 in a month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite all the btching, millennials are the richest generation in history. And they don't give a fck about having kids, so that expense is out of the way. They want big houses and nice cars. Millennials are just Boomers 2.0.
Only a small percentage of millennials are wealthy though bc the income gap is the greatest it’s ever been w this generation.
PP, and I agree. And they're demanding big houses. For all the supposed hate between the millennials and boomers, history is definitely rhyming with their extravagant tastes and puerile entitlement.
I guess my point was that the majority of millennials cannot afford even a starter home because of this extreme income inequality and the ones in this generation who are “demanding” and “entitled” are a very small percentage of millennials. Also, millennials are ages 29-44 now and most are struggling financially even though they’ve been out of college and working for many years at this point. They are Not just starting out their adult lives—that would be gen z.
Tell them to get off their phones and get a better job and a second job. Save, live frugally and they can buy a house.
Oh yes Grandpa, that $2.50 a day they will save giving up coffee will surely make up the $1,500,000 difference in price between when you bought your house and now...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite all the btching, millennials are the richest generation in history. And they don't give a fck about having kids, so that expense is out of the way. They want big houses and nice cars. Millennials are just Boomers 2.0.
Only a small percentage of millennials are wealthy though bc the income gap is the greatest it’s ever been w this generation.
PP, and I agree. And they're demanding big houses. For all the supposed hate between the millennials and boomers, history is definitely rhyming with their extravagant tastes and puerile entitlement.
I guess my point was that the majority of millennials cannot afford even a starter home because of this extreme income inequality and the ones in this generation who are “demanding” and “entitled” are a very small percentage of millennials. Also, millennials are ages 29-44 now and most are struggling financially even though they’ve been out of college and working for many years at this point. They are Not just starting out their adult lives—that would be gen z.
Tell them to get off their phones and get a better job and a second job. Save, live frugally and they can buy a house.
Oh yes Grandpa, that $2.50 a day they will save giving up coffee will surely make up the $1,500,000 difference in price between when you bought your house and now...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IME the "starter homes" our friends had were condos, not moldy SFHs
Depends where. Starter homes in my circles were condos in big cities, tract homes in cheaper COL states or moldy old SFHs in HCOL suburbs that they remodeled and sold for profit or upgraded later or even remained living in because they liked the area and couldn’t afford anything better, but could afford to make changes to their property. Buying an old home and later building a new one or gut renovating/adding on is hardly unusual in HCOL area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite all the btching, millennials are the richest generation in history. And they don't give a fck about having kids, so that expense is out of the way. They want big houses and nice cars. Millennials are just Boomers 2.0.
Only a small percentage of millennials are wealthy though bc the income gap is the greatest it’s ever been w this generation.
PP, and I agree. And they're demanding big houses. For all the supposed hate between the millennials and boomers, history is definitely rhyming with their extravagant tastes and puerile entitlement.
I guess my point was that the majority of millennials cannot afford even a starter home because of this extreme income inequality and the ones in this generation who are “demanding” and “entitled” are a very small percentage of millennials. Also, millennials are ages 29-44 now and most are struggling financially even though they’ve been out of college and working for many years at this point. They are Not just starting out their adult lives—that would be gen z.
Tell them to get off their phones and get a better job and a second job. Save, live frugally and they can buy a house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite all the btching, millennials are the richest generation in history. And they don't give a fck about having kids, so that expense is out of the way. They want big houses and nice cars. Millennials are just Boomers 2.0.
Only a small percentage of millennials are wealthy though bc the income gap is the greatest it’s ever been w this generation.
PP, and I agree. And they're demanding big houses. For all the supposed hate between the millennials and boomers, history is definitely rhyming with their extravagant tastes and puerile entitlement.
I guess my point was that the majority of millennials cannot afford even a starter home because of this extreme income inequality and the ones in this generation who are “demanding” and “entitled” are a very small percentage of millennials. Also, millennials are ages 29-44 now and most are struggling financially even though they’ve been out of college and working for many years at this point. They are Not just starting out their adult lives—that would be gen z.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IME the "starter homes" our friends had were condos, not moldy SFHs
Condos are a scam. If you don’t own the land under your house you ate throwing away money.
Both owning your home (condo or single family) and being a renter involve "throwing money away". The question is how much money are you spending vs how much equity are you building up vs how much money are you saving. And do you like where you live? Our friends had some nice condos.
Condos don’t appreciate. They lose value after adjusting for inflation. SFHs tend to hold their value after adjusting for inflation or appreciate. Generally, condos make you poorer, and you are better off renting rather than buying a condo. HOA fees (for condos) also tend to increase much faster than inflation due to misaligned incentives that discourage HOAs from adequately maintaining shared structures.
Here are some inflation-adjusted examples of why condos are a terrible investment
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Silver-Spring/1201-E-West-Hwy-20910/unit-335/home/12330282 (2013->2025 17% decline in value)
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/326-8th-St-NE-20002/unit-402/home/10190022 (2004->2025 29% decline in value)
https://www.redfin.com/VA/Arlington/1205-N-Garfield-St-22201/unit-609/home/11281068 (2010->2025 9% decline in value)
https://www.redfin.com/VA/McLean/1511-Lincoln-Way-22102/unit-201B/home/9838476 (2003->2025 17% decline in value)
Anonymous wrote:IME the "starter homes" our friends had were condos, not moldy SFHs