Anonymous wrote:PP needs to cool it. I'm typing this from my nice Baltimore neighborhood after just having walked the dogs and seeing all my pleasant and happy neighbors. Yes, it's a problematic city, and yes, there are nice parts of the city where many people live well.
Anonymous wrote:Stay in DC. You would pay higher county income tax and higher property tax as compared to DC and your house value won't increase as much in the future.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Baltimore has plenty of grayed-out flips with Edison bulbs -- but they're mostly Hampden or downtown. The burbier areas aren't vying quite as hard for the Millenial market.
It sounds like you don’t actually live here. All those millennials moving from other cities, Canton, Fed Hill, Harbor East definitely care a lot about how updated a house is, and they are the people who are buying in North Baltimore suburbs. It wasn’t true of the Baltimore market until later than elsewhere but it has been the case for the past 5-7 years. I’ve sold two house in the Towson/Lutherville area in that time period. Unrenovated sells but at a discount unless the location is special.
Not only do I live here, I just bought a house here. I was looking extensively in Lutherville/Timonium and the vast majority of what I saw was either un-staged/un-renovated or was "staged" in the "LIVE, LAUGH, LOVE" aesthetic rather than the exposed-brick-and-Edison-bulbs aesthetic. *shrug*
Might depend on the price range, I guess.
Maybe? But I just glanced through the most expensive places in 21093 and if you don't count the $1.8m new build, all the next most expensive properties are either somewhat dated or quite dated. I stand by my assessment that it's just not a fashion-forward market. I think that's a good thing. I'd rather not deal with someone's hastily-installed herringbone tile etc. These are families selling, not flippers looking to make a buck on a buyer dazzled by gray paint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Baltimore has plenty of grayed-out flips with Edison bulbs -- but they're mostly Hampden or downtown. The burbier areas aren't vying quite as hard for the Millenial market.
It sounds like you don’t actually live here. All those millennials moving from other cities, Canton, Fed Hill, Harbor East definitely care a lot about how updated a house is, and they are the people who are buying in North Baltimore suburbs. It wasn’t true of the Baltimore market until later than elsewhere but it has been the case for the past 5-7 years. I’ve sold two house in the Towson/Lutherville area in that time period. Unrenovated sells but at a discount unless the location is special.
Not only do I live here, I just bought a house here. I was looking extensively in Lutherville/Timonium and the vast majority of what I saw was either un-staged/un-renovated or was "staged" in the "LIVE, LAUGH, LOVE" aesthetic rather than the exposed-brick-and-Edison-bulbs aesthetic. *shrug*
Might depend on the price range, I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Baltimore has plenty of grayed-out flips with Edison bulbs -- but they're mostly Hampden or downtown. The burbier areas aren't vying quite as hard for the Millenial market.
It sounds like you don’t actually live here. All those millennials moving from other cities, Canton, Fed Hill, Harbor East definitely care a lot about how updated a house is, and they are the people who are buying in North Baltimore suburbs. It wasn’t true of the Baltimore market until later than elsewhere but it has been the case for the past 5-7 years. I’ve sold two house in the Towson/Lutherville area in that time period. Unrenovated sells but at a discount unless the location is special.
Not only do I live here, I just bought a house here. I was looking extensively in Lutherville/Timonium and the vast majority of what I saw was either un-staged/un-renovated or was "staged" in the "LIVE, LAUGH, LOVE" aesthetic rather than the exposed-brick-and-Edison-bulbs aesthetic. *shrug*
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Baltimore has plenty of grayed-out flips with Edison bulbs -- but they're mostly Hampden or downtown. The burbier areas aren't vying quite as hard for the Millenial market.
It sounds like you don’t actually live here. All those millennials moving from other cities, Canton, Fed Hill, Harbor East definitely care a lot about how updated a house is, and they are the people who are buying in North Baltimore suburbs. It wasn’t true of the Baltimore market until later than elsewhere but it has been the case for the past 5-7 years. I’ve sold two house in the Towson/Lutherville area in that time period. Unrenovated sells but at a discount unless the location is special.
Anonymous wrote:Baltimore has plenty of grayed-out flips with Edison bulbs -- but they're mostly Hampden or downtown. The burbier areas aren't vying quite as hard for the Millenial market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, this just came on the market.
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Baltimore/6312-Bellona-Ave-21212/home/9645280
Towson schools but a block from the north Baltimore border. Best of both worlds. Slight fixer upper but cosmetics only likely. Area is called Pinehurst. The Pinehurst / Cedarcroft neighborhoods are lovely and just north of Homeland.
Will probably get multiple offers. But even at 100k+ above asking this is a great buy!
Oof, that’s a nice house that has obviously been loved but would have killed the agent to take some of the (again, clearly loved) pieces out of the staging? Really hard to imagine a young family there or get a sense of the rooms.
Once you get outside of DC and similar markets, staging is less of a thing. I was appalled when we moved to Philly by how little prep anyone did before putting houses on the market, and I think Baltimore is similar. It's just a different sensibility. Nobody expects to make a killing on their house or is thinking about how to max it out.
That isn’t true generally for Baltimore, all of the better known agents stage. This listing is a bit of a dog.