Me in 2014 - I will be able to own a nice $150,000 starter home in Bryan in no time
Sounds like a colonia.UTExan said:
One way to drive down home prices is by zoning for smaller homes (800-1000 sq ft) in areas that have space to build them. It would allow singles and young couples to purchase at 80-150k, get the tax advantages and start building a wealth base. Putting people in small crappy apartments with no ability to generate equity is stupid and hopefully, some smart town or city on the outskirts of a major metro area will figure this out.
tk111 said:Nitpicking...but the median is 2200 sqft. (hph was using medians not means, which is better because it is less thrown around by the weight of ridiculously huge houses). Sorry..im a statistician...I can't help myselfDefinitely Not A Cop said:
Down payment percent gross income: 45%
Total payment percent of gross income: 16%
Average house size: 1800 sqft
2023
Down payment percent gross income: 102%
Total payment percent of gross income: 46.3%
Average house size: 2500 sqft
So the house size has increased 40%, while the down payment is more than twice the amount. Economics were favorable in the 80's.
There is a good thread on the RE forum about urban infill in Houston.UTExan said:fka ftc said:Even if you got the lot for free your numbers are not workable. Well, maybe in Colony Ridge.UTExan said:
One way to drive down home prices is by zoning for smaller homes (800-1000 sq ft) in areas that have space to build them. It would allow singles and young couples to purchase at 80-150k, get the tax advantages and start building a wealth base. Putting people in small crappy apartments with no ability to generate equity is stupid and hopefully, some smart town or city on the outskirts of a major metro area will figure this out.
Fun fact, VDLs exist in many older communities located within commuting distance, particularly in places like Houston.
I have spent copious amounts of times looking at the situation you describe. Even when the numbers work from an affordability, the market is simply not there (even entry level home buyers demand the best schools, newest features, short commute).
Resetting expectations is the biggest challenge.
What if you have very small lots in parts of a town considered less than desirable? Granted it would be high density, but if you located these homes in places 50-70 miles from large city limits, would there not be sufficient housing demand for them? A first time buyer's other option is a condominium.
See! you overestimated by 3%! lolDefinitely Not A Cop said:tk111 said:Nitpicking...but the median is 2200 sqft. (hph was using medians not means, which is better because it is less thrown around by the weight of ridiculously huge houses). Sorry..im a statistician...I can't help myselfDefinitely Not A Cop said:
Down payment percent gross income: 45%
Total payment percent of gross income: 16%
Average house size: 1800 sqft
2023
Down payment percent gross income: 102%
Total payment percent of gross income: 46.3%
Average house size: 2500 sqft
So the house size has increased 40%, while the down payment is more than twice the amount. Economics were favorable in the 80's.
Thanks.
Median in the 80's was 1595 sq Ft.
Median today is 2200 sq Ft.
37% increase.
Unfortunately that's not really where the market in land development is going. The hot new thing is "Build To Rent" communities which I believe are going to be truly awful for our communities, especially in 10-20 years when serious maintenance issues start popping up. I've heard them described as "The slums of tomorrow" and I don't know that I can disagree with that.UTExan said:
One way to drive down home prices is by zoning for smaller homes (800-1000 sq ft) in areas that have space to build them. It would allow singles and young couples to purchase at 80-150k, get the tax advantages and start building a wealth base. Putting people in small crappy apartments with no ability to generate equity is stupid and hopefully, some smart town or city on the outskirts of a major metro area will figure this out.
tk111 said:See! you overestimated by 3%! lolDefinitely Not A Cop said:tk111 said:Nitpicking...but the median is 2200 sqft. (hph was using medians not means, which is better because it is less thrown around by the weight of ridiculously huge houses). Sorry..im a statistician...I can't help myselfDefinitely Not A Cop said:
Down payment percent gross income: 45%
Total payment percent of gross income: 16%
Average house size: 1800 sqft
2023
Down payment percent gross income: 102%
Total payment percent of gross income: 46.3%
Average house size: 2500 sqft
So the house size has increased 40%, while the down payment is more than twice the amount. Economics were favorable in the 80's.
Thanks.
Median in the 80's was 1595 sq Ft.
Median today is 2200 sq Ft.
37% increase.
I feel even worse for the fact that we re-financed in 2020 at what has to have been the lowest of the low. I kid you not - 1.5%. We have maybe 14 years left to payoff because we always put extra on our payments but it practically makes almost no difference how long we take to pay off the rest now.
Understanding there are psychological components to this decision, but when savings rates exceed borrowing rates, you may want to be saving and not paying extra on that super cheap debt,tk111 said:
See! you overestimated by 3%! lol
I feel even worse for the fact that we re-financed in 2020 at what has to have been the lowest of the low. I kid you not - 1.5%. We have maybe 14 years left to payoff because we always put extra on our payments but it practically makes almost no difference how long we take to pay off the rest now.
Meant to say we used to before we refinanced.fka ftc said:Understanding there are psychological components to this decision, but when savings rates exceed borrowing rates, you may want to be saving and not paying extra on that super cheap debt,tk111 said:
See! you overestimated by 3%! lol
I feel even worse for the fact that we re-financed in 2020 at what has to have been the lowest of the low. I kid you not - 1.5%. We have maybe 14 years left to payoff because we always put extra on our payments but it practically makes almost no difference how long we take to pay off the rest now.
there will be a recession pretty soon- just a question how severe it will be.JobSecurity said:
not really an "inflation" problem, it's a supply and demand problem. Unfortunately with no obvious solution.
If the fed wasn't focused on a soft landing there might be hope, but I don't see this dropping outside of a recession
If we elect Trump, I think we avoid one.LMCane said:there will be a recession pretty soon- just a question how severe it will be.JobSecurity said:
not really an "inflation" problem, it's a supply and demand problem. Unfortunately with no obvious solution.
If the fed wasn't focused on a soft landing there might be hope, but I don't see this dropping outside of a recession
LMCane said:there will be a recession pretty soon- just a question how severe it will be.JobSecurity said:
not really an "inflation" problem, it's a supply and demand problem. Unfortunately with no obvious solution.
If the fed wasn't focused on a soft landing there might be hope, but I don't see this dropping outside of a recession
hph6203 said:You have to save 2.5x as long to purchase a home that costs 3x as much monthly. Interest rates are a portion of the equation, but they matter WAY less than price relative to income. Even at 0% interest rates it's more expensive/difficult to buy a home than it was in the early 80's.techno-ag said:
What did we ever do back when the interest rates were near 18%?
Oh yeah, I remember. We saved up for 20% down, didn't buy more than we could afford, and refinanced when rates went down.
1980
Median House Price: 47,200
Median Household Income: 21,000
20% Down: 9,440
Interest Rate: 17%
Tax: 864/yr (72.00/mo)
HOI: 250/yr (20.80/mo)
P&I: 539.00
Total Payment: 631.80
Down payment percent gross income: 45%
Total payment percent of gross income: 16%
2023
Median House Price: 416,000
Median Household Income: 81,500
20% Down: 83,200
Interest Rate: 7.5%
Tax: 7615 (634.59/mo)
Insurance: 2204 (183.67/mo)
P&I: 2327.00
Total Payment: 3145.26
Down payment percent gross income: 102%
Total payment percent of gross income: 46.3%
And I'm sure these home prices reflected the 18 percent interest rate?techno-ag said:
What did we ever do back when the interest rates were near 18%?
Oh yeah, I remember. We saved up for 20% down, didn't buy more than we could afford, and refinanced when rates went down.
Definitely Not A Cop said:
Down payment percent gross income: 45%
Total payment percent of gross income: 16%
Average house size: 1800 sqft
2023
Down payment percent gross income: 102%
Total payment percent of gross income: 46.3%
Average house size: 2500 sqft
So the house size has increased 40%, while the down payment compared to income is more than twice the amount. Economics were favorable in the 80's.
Yeah it was interesting at the time to look at it because we do generally believe in getting rid of debt quicker regardless of the ultimate amount we'll pay, and also had to weigh the options of a little higher rate with a longer term + continuing to pay extra vs a shorter term with lower rate and just riding it.fka ftc said:
To be clear I was not trying to be critical at all. Some want to get rid of debt from a psychological standpoint or simply from a philosophical one, which is completely respectable.
JobSecurity said:
not really an "inflation" problem, it's a supply and demand problem. Unfortunately with no obvious solution.
If the fed wasn't focused on a soft landing there might be hope, but I don't see this dropping outside of a recession
Definitely Not A Cop said:hph6203 said:You have to save 2.5x as long to purchase a home that costs 3x as much monthly. Interest rates are a portion of the equation, but they matter WAY less than price relative to income. Even at 0% interest rates it's more expensive/difficult to buy a home than it was in the early 80's.techno-ag said:
What did we ever do back when the interest rates were near 18%?
Oh yeah, I remember. We saved up for 20% down, didn't buy more than we could afford, and refinanced when rates went down.
1980
Median House Price: 47,200
Median Household Income: 21,000
20% Down: 9,440
Interest Rate: 17%
Tax: 864/yr (72.00/mo)
HOI: 250/yr (20.80/mo)
P&I: 539.00
Total Payment: 631.80
Down payment percent gross income: 45%
Total payment percent of gross income: 16%
2023
Median House Price: 416,000
Median Household Income: 81,500
20% Down: 83,200
Interest Rate: 7.5%
Tax: 7615 (634.59/mo)
Insurance: 2204 (183.67/mo)
P&I: 2327.00
Total Payment: 3145.26
Down payment percent gross income: 102%
Total payment percent of gross income: 46.3%
Thanks. Some people's inability to admit that economics were more favorable to them in the past is strange. And that's not to absolve the idiocy towards our current economic policies that this generation is perpetuating. I'm sure the millenials will be gaslighting the 30 year olds the same way in 30 years.
It is still largely a seller's market, so why would they lower prices?Funky Winkerbean said:
I never saw the prices come back down after lumber prices got so high during Covid. I think there's profits being made.
Logos Stick said:Definitely Not A Cop said:
Down payment percent gross income: 45%
Total payment percent of gross income: 16%
Average house size: 1800 sqft
2023
Down payment percent gross income: 102%
Total payment percent of gross income: 46.3%
Average house size: 2500 sqft
So the house size has increased 40%, while the down payment compared to income is more than twice the amount. Economics were favorable in the 80's.
Now do the amenities.
Heck the roof itself is 2.5x what it was back then for the same square foot home because of the massive pitch difference.
Put formica in. Put linoleum in instead of tile. Put those cheap ass windows in we had back then. Put in a non tiled walk in shower/bath instead of both. No fence versus a privacy wood fence. Etc
Funky Winkerbean said:
I never saw the prices come back down after lumber prices got so high during Covid. I think there's profits being made.
I think his point, and I could be wrong, was it's not JUST an inflation problem.Logos Stick said:JobSecurity said:
not really an "inflation" problem, it's a supply and demand problem. Unfortunately with no obvious solution.
If the fed wasn't focused on a soft landing there might be hope, but I don't see this dropping outside of a recession
The monetary base is the highest in US history. The M2 money supply is the largest in US history. Yes, it's inflation.
You can't look at just housing as far as inflation goes; inflation is an aggregate measure. And that aggregate measure has started rising again. It's around 4% right now. Housing is part of that. We have surpassed peak housing prices when rates were half what they are now.
fka ftc said:
Its not the people of the 1980s that had it easy, its way out of whack lifestyle expectations of younger generations these days (I am Gen X and would include us in that as well).
NoahAg said:Sounds like a colonia.UTExan said:
One way to drive down home prices is by zoning for smaller homes (800-1000 sq ft) in areas that have space to build them. It would allow singles and young couples to purchase at 80-150k, get the tax advantages and start building a wealth base. Putting people in small crappy apartments with no ability to generate equity is stupid and hopefully, some smart town or city on the outskirts of a major metro area will figure this out.
Cities don't want zoning like that. Small homes = cheap = higher density and higher crime.