Some of the $200k homes around here look like what my buddies son paid $800k for in San Diego.
Same around here. $150k would get a nice starter home.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Some of the $200k homes around here look like what my buddies son paid $800k for in San Diego.
2012 was also the low in housing prices, Nationwide at least, and new construction had just started to tick up. You may have benefitted from the timing.I'm out of touch with building costs, but I'd wager it would be tight. I don't know what 203,000 in building costs in 2012 equal today, but I wouldn't be surprised if it weren't double.
You still haven’t answered the question of where. Your info is kind of meaningless without that context.Just did a quick Zillow search in the nearest town to us, pop 18k and very quickly found a dozen available homes for under $100k.
Whole lot more than that available for under $200k.
Some of the $200k homes around here look like what my buddies son paid $800k for in San Diego.
I'm in central IN, but same deals are available in pretty much any of what are termed as the "fly over states", so long as you stay away from some of the metro areas, college towns or tourist areas.You still haven’t answered the question of where. Your info is kind of meaningless without that context.
Places like that aren't happening enough for the young generation.I'm in central IN, but same deals are available in pretty much any of what are termed as the "fly over states", so long as you stay away from some of the metro areas, college towns or tourist areas.
It's not only the cost of housing, but also the taxes in some of these HCOL areas are horrendous.
Not cool in the 70's. Not cool today.
Home values in Lubbock, TX
Lubbock is a city in Texas and consists of 55 neighborhoods. There are 3,033 homes for sale, ranging from $500 to $8M.
- $242.6K
Median listing home price- $136
Median listing home price/Sq ft- $236.5K
Median sold home price
The Midwest thing is real. Our cousin and her husband moved from Seattle (Struggling with rent) to Wisconsin (Mad Town) and went from dual income to single income, and bought a house right away.
Exactly!I believe it. Crazy part is that Madison is probably the highest cost of living in the entire state.
So that is ONE income AND not in anyway a starter home around there.....that is a 2500sf log home on 1.5 acres with a pond. Wages in the area are strong as well as it is the bio-medical device manufacturing leader in the world. My nephew was making 25 and hour in HS on a co-op PT gig. You can find a decent house in the 12-1500 sf range on a small lot for 150,000 or under....Fixer uppers even lessCompletely disagree, what is the wages in the area you bought your house?
Let’s basic monthly budget for a person making $25 an hour, $834 take home per week, $3336 a month in your pocket. That is with nothing going to a retirement account.
With 5% down, PMI, Taxes at 3k, and insurance at 2.5k the payment is at $1978.
Electric $150
Propane 2 fills per year in a older house $115
Phone $65
Car, gas, and insurance is $400
There is $628 left in the wallet for the month and we haven’t budgeted for any food yet. Just the stuff to own the house and get to work.
The point was that to own a home (unless you are independently wealthy) you HAVE to make sacrifices....whether that is moving, or taking a second job, or doing alternative building methods, or delaying having kids. I think 20 somethings that live in the intermountain west(and other high cost areas), KNOW that it is ridiculously expensive (largely because of human refuse from the coasts moving in) thinking that they are going to keep up that is pretty stupid. Throughout my younger life and military career my family spent a LOT of time living in sub standard (by my standards today) housing, cutting corners on everything and having expectations based on our actual means all with the goal of owning what we wanted. BTW, I am not a boomer (Xer).I think expecting every kid in their 20s to move to the midwest if they ever want to own a home is pretty damn ridiculous, and would make the intermountain west a lot shittier place for the boomers who got in when it was affordable.
Really?largely because of human refuse from the coasts moving in
For reference as well, the house we just bought (almost as big as the one here in COS) on 1.5ish acres with a pond vs .18 acre uneven lot here in COS ........taxes are HALF (and will be halfed again when it becomes "primary" home), insurance is a QUARTER and everything else (except utilities) involved with COL is at least 25% (often quite a bit more) less. The comment about "surprise when the younger folks move there" would make some sense except that 95% will never consider it because of the sacrifices (no instant access to boogie coffee, no night life, etc) and will instead continue to whine and moan about it while using their $1000 phone, having a $6-800 car payment, etc.......I'm in central IN, but same deals are available in pretty much any of what are termed as the "fly over states", so long as you stay away from some of the metro areas, college towns or tourist areas.
It's not only the cost of housing, but also the taxes in some of these HCOL areas are horr
Yeah, really. CO, where I have been for 16 years now is a prime example. Native Coloradans aren't pushing the crazy increase. It is east and west coast folks coming from even crazier cost areas, flush with cash, paying OVER asking price for anything decent and bringing the horrible tax/government/social policies that drove where they came from into the toilet and made them want to leave. Look at the Denver/Aurora metroplex vs what it was 15 years ago. There is absolutely NOTHING better than it was and THAT population base rules the state.Really?
You realize that's exactly what you're telling all the intermountain west people to do to the midwest, right? Blood and soil.Yeah, really. CO, where I have been for 16 years now is a prime example. Native Coloradans aren't pushing the crazy increase. It is east and west coast folks coming from even crazier cost areas, flush with cash, paying OVER asking price for anything decent and bringing the horrible tax/government/social policies that drove where they came from into the toilet and made them want to leave. Look at the Denver/Aurora metroplex vs what it was 15 years ago. There is absolutely NOTHING better than it was and THAT population base rules the state.