Are people in your area having a tough time finding housing?

LuvOrlando

DIS Legend
Joined
Jun 8, 2006
Messages
21,285
I'm in Massachusetts and the number of people I read about on Nextdoor who are desperately trying to find housing is unbelievable. Most people are in the $1000 a month range and it seems a solid number are section 8 and they are offering a lot too. I am still on my old PA Nextdoor and this is rarely mentioned but then again, there are way more homes in the $1000 a month realm in PA, here homes seem to run a million on average which is a few times higher that in PA. Now I am curious if this is an isolated Massachusetts thing or is this more common in other areas too?

Weird thing is there is zero rent control here so landlords can demand whatever they want even if a facility is almost empty, NYC was always expensive but they had rent rules plus going to one of the boroughs and adding some commute time always worked.
 
Housing supply is in relationship to lifestyle... housing here in Yuma is cheap and available and we keep waiting for fire folks from California to come over... but who wants to live in 105-118 from May to November 1st... being retired I can watch TV and read all day
 

Yes, we live in central Florida & it's virtually impossible to find affordable housing to purchase or rent :(.
... which makes sense.. retirement baby boomers have cash and assets and no student loans... and afraid of debt... once baby boomers disappear and their children waste away those inheritance.. market will settle down... and who knows when that will happen...so this homeless/assets poor generation will have to get on the Oregon trail philosophy and move to a culture and lifestyle less desirable.. and that is sad... but it's been done many times in history
 
It's rough. Plenty of homes for sale. However, don't want the $3K per month mortgage payment and wiping out majority of savings to do so. Renting is way below that. Plenty of rentals available in good areas. However, rentals have upped their income requirements from 2x-2.5x to 3x-3.5x monthly income. Lots of roommate & multigenerational households now.

I do agree with the Oregon trail philosophy; we're looking to relocate because we simply can't justify paying the asking prices on the basics needed to live life as we're becoming LA 2.0.
 
To the best of my knowledge, there are only two major cities on the Eastern seaboard that still have rent controlled units: Boston and NYC.
The way the program is administered in NYC creates enemies of landlords and tenants and I hope it’s better in your neck of the woods @LuvOrlando.

One of my home attendant just rented a one bedroom unit for $3000.00 @ month which had me picking my jaw off the floor. Now she has a voucher for about $2700.00 mthly but that’s only good for five years. Her prior home was destroyed in a fire so she has no furnishings but the city gave her an air mattress to sleep on 👀. I’m so glad I harangued youngest son into buying a co-op here when prices were less.
 
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Affordable housing definitely is a problem in south Jersey. We retired here and had bought in 1998. We are members of St Vincent de Paul society and do work with people who have trouble paying rent especially during the winter months.
 
Yes and landlords around here have not been renewing leases, renovating and then charging hundreds more.
And yet these units don't sit empty either which means there are also lots of people who can afford the insane prices.
 
My kids spend $2000+ a month for their one bedrooms. Median home sales in my town were $630,000 last month, that would be about $17,000 a year in property taxes. Folks in Nextdoor are getting ads for rooms being rented out for $1400 a month, no kitchen access, shared bathroom, no parking.
 
My daughter lived at home until she was 28 to save up a down payment to buy half a duplex. She has a lot of my mother in her, she thought renting was an absolute waste of money. She bought half a duplex.....got first time home buyer mortgage sponsored by the state, so her down payment was only $12,500 . She bought in a development of identical duplexes. Her payment was $1,100 a month. The RENT for that duplex was $2,000. Co-workers wondered how she could afford the payment until they found out they all were paying more in rent.
The big issue here right now is the City is approving projects with a certain number of "affordable" units......and somehow the plans get amended during construction and when the project is complete, the affordable units have been amended out entirely.
The other issue here is projects are being approved with NO parking. But THAT is a whole other issue.
 














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