TransTrender
Gold Member
Out of curiosity I looked up the Redfin/Zillow listings of my parent's old home in California as well as some other properties of friends of family from the past.
Some were recently sold, and others weren't but houses on the same street or even next door were on sale.
Looking at these prices, I don't understand who is buying these homes, and who can actually afford them?
Here's an article that simplifies things a bit:
Another article about income breakdowns:
Where I was looking every house on the block is now between $1.1M to $1.5M for some pretty regular single family homes, built in the late 1970's, and very suburban neighborhoods.
First you consider the down-payment which should be about 20%, so $220K to $300K, then you have the mortgage itself, homeowners insurance, and property taxes. These estimated mortgages, even with 20% down, were in the $9K to $11K range per month.
If your target is 30% take home goes toward the mortgage, then your gross pay really needs to be more than $400K per year for the household to afford it.
Next I looked at the income demographics and clearly the data showed most people cannot afford these homes. Best case median, constrained as much as I could, put some households in the $200K to $220K range, and even the distributions couldn't support getting to a large enough slice of the local population to hit that $400K+ annual household income.
This article from January 2024 had the median single family home price as $1.3M in Orange County CA.
Sure there's plenty of money in Orange County, but I don't see the data on the jobs or the people that actually make enough money to afford these.
Was this huge jump in housing prices all from investor types? Have they priced out all the regular humans from the housing market? Are these people holding on to ticking time bombs and will hopefully be wiped out by their speculative purchase so regular people can own homes again?
Is it the case people are getting these loans anyway and then living paycheck to paycheck with tons of credit card debt just to make ends meet?
This seems like madness and I can't wrap my head around it.
Some were recently sold, and others weren't but houses on the same street or even next door were on sale.
Looking at these prices, I don't understand who is buying these homes, and who can actually afford them?
Here's an article that simplifies things a bit:
Another article about income breakdowns:
Home Buyers Need to Earn $47,000 More Than in 2020
The income needed to comfortably afford a home is up 80% since 2020, while median income has risen 23% in that time.
www.zillow.com
Where I was looking every house on the block is now between $1.1M to $1.5M for some pretty regular single family homes, built in the late 1970's, and very suburban neighborhoods.
First you consider the down-payment which should be about 20%, so $220K to $300K, then you have the mortgage itself, homeowners insurance, and property taxes. These estimated mortgages, even with 20% down, were in the $9K to $11K range per month.
If your target is 30% take home goes toward the mortgage, then your gross pay really needs to be more than $400K per year for the household to afford it.
Next I looked at the income demographics and clearly the data showed most people cannot afford these homes. Best case median, constrained as much as I could, put some households in the $200K to $220K range, and even the distributions couldn't support getting to a large enough slice of the local population to hit that $400K+ annual household income.
This article from January 2024 had the median single family home price as $1.3M in Orange County CA.
January home sales and price report
<span style="line-height: 107%;">Tempering mortgage rates propel California <span style="color: #212121;">home sales in January.</span></span>
www.car.org
Was this huge jump in housing prices all from investor types? Have they priced out all the regular humans from the housing market? Are these people holding on to ticking time bombs and will hopefully be wiped out by their speculative purchase so regular people can own homes again?
Is it the case people are getting these loans anyway and then living paycheck to paycheck with tons of credit card debt just to make ends meet?
This seems like madness and I can't wrap my head around it.