I certainly didn't say the only ones who have equity are those who don't keep up with Jones'..TXTransplant said:
And I'm going to disagree with the thought that the ~only~ people who don't have equity are those who continually try to keep up with the Jones.
If you don't live in a major US city or (maybe) one of its suburbs, 6-7 figure home appreciation is something you just hear about on TV.
My first house, I purchased in 2004 for $155k. Sold it in 2011 for $179k. It sold in 2017 for $155k (I think it went into foreclosure) and again in 2019 for $192k.
To make money on real estate, you have to take a risk - buy in an up and coming area, do renovations, maybe spend more than you really want to, etc. I will freely admit that I have NOT done that.
I alluded to that twice in my post, once saying my houston burb house appreciated 10% in 7 years, and that houston burbs suck for appreciation because of sprawl.
But Houston is not like many large metro areas. Any where in CA, seattle, denver, austin, eastern cities.. It is not uncommon to have pretty good appreciation. But going back to Houston, any place closer to town is going to see this.. inside the loop or to lesser extent inside BW8. It's just houston (and probably dallas too) burbs that suck, because it's too easy for housing developments to show up another mile out.. people don't mind driving 50 miles to work.
But you are right, it isn't happening in Alabama, or Kansas, or other midwest city or any place that people aren't flocking to at some point
I didn't take any risks.. just bought a new house in a denver suburb that was growing quickly.. and headed towards white collar area. Before I knew it, it was up 10-15% a year for several years in a row.