Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Florida and other places have gotten very expensive last 4 years. To the point moving at 67 makes little sense.
My brother bought a place in Florida for 550k in 2018 but did not sell his NY house till 2023 which he got 1.1 million.
Today his Florida place is now worth 1.1 million. A doubling of price.
At this point it would make more sense for me to keep my DMV house and buy a two bedroom condo in an older building for 300k cash.
What is the reason for this kind of spike in Florida housing?
Is it work from home trends sending more young people ?
Taxes. People are voting with their feet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DEI or as I call it, Didn’t Earn It ruined affordable options near their home for retirees.
Back around 1992 the town I used to live in of all SFHs that was already rising in prices parents were worried kids could not afford to buy in town they grew up in and retiree parents were sitting in large homes they did not need but no where in town to downsize too. They converted an old school in town near train and stores and parks to this wonderful 65 and older apartment building below market guaranteed for life available to current town residents over 65. Idea was they sell home or give to kids and frees up all those empty bedrooms. You know five bedroom houses with an empty Nestor.
It lasted five years before being sued as being racist and inequitable. They won and poor people other towns and illegals flooded in and over last 20 years has become a slum and people in town still have no where to go.
Link to an article or this is just a casually veiled story about your lame politics
Was in Port Washington NY and school was in town by train to Manhattan, restaurants and water. Lawsuit was based on Port Washington in 1930s to mid 1970s was nearly all white. (Today has a big Spanish and Asian Population too). They sued as it was nearly all white people getting apartments but that was just long term owners 65 and older of course was mostly white.
BTW Bethesda has same thing. Waverly House by metro is a 158 unit senior citizen below market building right by metro and Catholic Church and Round House theatre It is full of illegals, mainly Asian, most don’t speak English, very few even from Nearby area.
Legally you can no longer restrict units to residents of town or make requirements long term residents. That would be a perfect place for Bethesda long term residents over 65 to downsize too. I would make it Bethesda residents only who own a home 25 years or greater only downsizing, but illegal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DEI or as I call it, Didn’t Earn It ruined affordable options near their home for retirees.
Back around 1992 the town I used to live in of all SFHs that was already rising in prices parents were worried kids could not afford to buy in town they grew up in and retiree parents were sitting in large homes they did not need but no where in town to downsize too. They converted an old school in town near train and stores and parks to this wonderful 65 and older apartment building below market guaranteed for life available to current town residents over 65. Idea was they sell home or give to kids and frees up all those empty bedrooms. You know five bedroom houses with an empty Nestor.
It lasted five years before being sued as being racist and inequitable. They won and poor people other towns and illegals flooded in and over last 20 years has become a slum and people in town still have no where to go.
Link to an article or this is just a casually veiled story about your lame politics
Anonymous wrote:Wondering if I'd be happy moving back to my hometown after being in the DMV for 2+ decades. Most of my friends in my hometown also left, so we'd mostly, but not entirely, be starting over socially. Part of me thinks that could be a good thing to have a fresh start. Also, while we know a lot of people in the DMV, we really don't socialize all that much, so we don't really see them that often anyway.
In an ideal world, maybe we'd have two places, but the point of moving away would be largely financial since cost of living is definitely better where I grew up.
Would love to hear about others' experiences with this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have moved to the Portland, Maine area and couldn't be happier. Do not miss the swamp one bit.
What are your winters like??
Some snow, some cold, fine on the whole.
Climate change.
What about hurricanes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Florida and other places have gotten very expensive last 4 years. To the point moving at 67 makes little sense.
My brother bought a place in Florida for 550k in 2018 but did not sell his NY house till 2023 which he got 1.1 million.
Today his Florida place is now worth 1.1 million. A doubling of price.
At this point it would make more sense for me to keep my DMV house and buy a two bedroom condo in an older building for 300k cash.
What is the reason for this kind of spike in Florida housing?
Is it work from home trends sending more young people ?
Anonymous wrote:Florida and other places have gotten very expensive last 4 years. To the point moving at 67 makes little sense.
My brother bought a place in Florida for 550k in 2018 but did not sell his NY house till 2023 which he got 1.1 million.
Today his Florida place is now worth 1.1 million. A doubling of price.
At this point it would make more sense for me to keep my DMV house and buy a two bedroom condo in an older building for 300k cash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DEI or as I call it, Didn’t Earn It ruined affordable options near their home for retirees.
Back around 1992 the town I used to live in of all SFHs that was already rising in prices parents were worried kids could not afford to buy in town they grew up in and retiree parents were sitting in large homes they did not need but no where in town to downsize too. They converted an old school in town near train and stores and parks to this wonderful 65 and older apartment building below market guaranteed for life available to current town residents over 65. Idea was they sell home or give to kids and frees up all those empty bedrooms. You know five bedroom houses with an empty Nestor.
It lasted five years before being sued as being racist and inequitable. They won and poor people other towns and illegals flooded in and over last 20 years has become a slum and people in town still have no where to go.
Link to an article or this is just a casually veiled story about your lame politics
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We'll retire in DC, as empty nesters don't need much space nor want to spend remaining life to maintain/furnish/repair/clean/upgrade it. We'll shed the car in favor of public transport and Uber or Zip car.
Our goal is smaller footprint and urban lifestyle with shopping, cafe, museums, zoo, arboretum and parks, protests, live music etc, also three airports nearby to fly out, mountains and water within reach, Alexandria and Annapolis near by, bus to NYC.
Have you lived anywhere else in decades? DC has good walkability but the parks, restaurants, live music and shopping are very limited. I will give you museums but can’t say much for the zoo. Even saying shopping is odd since most shopping here is limited to CVS. There isn’t even a decent department store!
Mountains and water? Closest beaches aren’t great and are crowded. Mountains are okay but hardly the Rocky Mountains or somewhere like Vermont.
When I read a post like yours I assume you have no clue that DC isn’t that great. Most people are only in DC for work.
I'm not the PP but this is an odd take. Rock Creek Park is beautiful, so is Glover Park, that's just to name two parks.
We have great restaurants...Michelin Star and otherwise. And, close by in Northern VA there's some of the best Asian food in the US. DC is not NY when it comes to restaurants but come on.
I see live music all over DC: 9:30 Club, Anthem, etc.
The Shenandoah Mountains are stunning, as are the rest of the Blue Ridges. I do agree on shopping and nearby beaches but neither makes me eliminate DC as a desirable place to live in any way.
Sure but can you safely hang out in these parks, especially as a woman?
Anonymous wrote:DEI or as I call it, Didn’t Earn It ruined affordable options near their home for retirees.
Back around 1992 the town I used to live in of all SFHs that was already rising in prices parents were worried kids could not afford to buy in town they grew up in and retiree parents were sitting in large homes they did not need but no where in town to downsize too. They converted an old school in town near train and stores and parks to this wonderful 65 and older apartment building below market guaranteed for life available to current town residents over 65. Idea was they sell home or give to kids and frees up all those empty bedrooms. You know five bedroom houses with an empty Nestor.
It lasted five years before being sued as being racist and inequitable. They won and poor people other towns and illegals flooded in and over last 20 years has become a slum and people in town still have no where to go.