Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh they will, just not yet. Still too young.
The oldest Millennials are in their mid-thirties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh they will, just not yet. Still too young.
This - obviously - once they stop taking pictures of their food, have a kid and find it harder to go to Iceland for the weekend, they will want what everyone wants. Space and easy access (by car) to the things they need. Walking to meet friends for sushi will be replace by putting the sleeping baby in the car seat and finding a drive through Starbucks.
Matter of time. I am perfectly happy in my house for the next 20 years - I can wait.
36 year old Millennial here. I don't want your McMansion. Not eve a little. I don't want poor design, crap materials, a probable long commute, suburbs with amenities only accessible by driving, or the more conservative politics. I'd like more space for my three (already existing) kids, but I'm not buying a trailer on steroids to satisfy that desire, especially when I'm 56.
Also, I cook 90% of our meals at home. I've taken zero pictures of them.
This. Another millennial. I don't want to spend hours a week in my car. It's already challenging to juggle kids and a job without sitting in traffic for two hours a day. It's also hard to stay in shape and sitting in an office and then a car doesn't help. I couldn't care less about walking to get sushi. I don't want a lengthy commute and many others don't as well.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 34 and have one kid. No more kids for me (can't imagine paying for 2 daycare slots in DC). My little three person family has no need and no desire for a huge house. We make do with our 1 car and 1600 sq ft "shitshack" in a close-in, historic neighborhood with good public schools. DH and I bought this house in 2011, at the tail end of the recession, for less than $300K; now we have about $250K in equity. I think our situation is a lot better than people 5-10 years younger than us.
A lot of my friends have 1 or 2 kids and probably won't have more. I can't think of any that would ever buy a McMansion. We like being able to walk places. But maybe I'll eat my words in 10 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once millennials get older and make more money they will buy the mcmansion
+1 the minute they have the money
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh they will, just not yet. Still too young.
This - obviously - once they stop taking pictures of their food, have a kid and find it harder to go to Iceland for the weekend, they will want what everyone wants. Space and easy access (by car) to the things they need. Walking to meet friends for sushi will be replace by putting the sleeping baby in the car seat and finding a drive through Starbucks.
Matter of time. I am perfectly happy in my house for the next 20 years - I can wait.
36 year old Millennial here. I don't want your McMansion. Not eve a little. I don't want poor design, crap materials, a probable long commute, suburbs with amenities only accessible by driving, or the more conservative politics. I'd like more space for my three (already existing) kids, but I'm not buying a trailer on steroids to satisfy that desire, especially when I'm 56.
Also, I cook 90% of our meals at home. I've taken zero pictures of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh they will, just not yet. Still too young.
This - obviously - once they stop taking pictures of their food, have a kid and find it harder to go to Iceland for the weekend, they will want what everyone wants. Space and easy access (by car) to the things they need. Walking to meet friends for sushi will be replace by putting the sleeping baby in the car seat and finding a drive through Starbucks.
Matter of time. I am perfectly happy in my house for the next 20 years - I can wait.
36 year old Millennial here. I don't want your McMansion. Not eve a little. I don't want poor design, crap materials, a probable long commute, suburbs with amenities only accessible by driving, or the more conservative politics. I'd like more space for my three (already existing) kids, but I'm not buying a trailer on steroids to satisfy that desire, especially when I'm 56.
Also, I cook 90% of our meals at home. I've taken zero pictures of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh they will, just not yet. Still too young.
This - obviously - once they stop taking pictures of their food, have a kid and find it harder to go to Iceland for the weekend, they will want what everyone wants. Space and easy access (by car) to the things they need. Walking to meet friends for sushi will be replace by putting the sleeping baby in the car seat and finding a drive through Starbucks.
Matter of time. I am perfectly happy in my house for the next 20 years - I can wait.
36 year old Millennial here. I don't want your McMansion. Not eve a little. I don't want poor design, crap materials, a probable long commute, suburbs with amenities only accessible by driving, or the more conservative politics. I'd like more space for my three (already existing) kids, but I'm not buying a trailer on steroids to satisfy that desire, especially when I'm 56.
Also, I cook 90% of our meals at home. I've taken zero pictures of them.
Anonymous wrote:Once millennials get older and make more money they will buy the mcmansion
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh they will, just not yet. Still too young.
This - obviously - once they stop taking pictures of their food, have a kid and find it harder to go to Iceland for the weekend, they will want what everyone wants. Space and easy access (by car) to the things they need. Walking to meet friends for sushi will be replace by putting the sleeping baby in the car seat and finding a drive through Starbucks.
Matter of time. I am perfectly happy in my house for the next 20 years - I can wait.