This is going to be long and I am sorry if it sounds as if I am rambling. I have many things to type and feel like my hands are going a mile-a-minute.
I live in NE PA. It seems that there are a few of us posting in this thread also in Eastern PA.
I live in what they call the Coal Regions. People can still buy a house for under $100k. My first home that I DH and I bought in 1994 was $24,500 and our taxes were below $700. It had 3 bedrooms and we put in some hardwood, Berber and new windows. Nothing fancy, but we lived in that thing for 11 years!!! It was to be starter home, but in a short while we were living there for basically free. So we saved. And saved.
We just sold it for $40,000 as we moved into a "new" home.
We decided to stay in the same town. We bought a half double (duplex) for $80K. It is gorgeous. The woodwork is nicer than any McMansion I have yet to see. Open staircase. Hardwood throughout. Formal living room. Family room in basement. Four bedrooms. Dining room with built in china cabinets. Two bathrooms. New roof/oil burner. Two car garage. 2500 sq ft. (if you included the finished attic). I could go on and on. We are an hour and a half drive from Philly. My DH just drove to NYC last w/end to watch a Cross Country race, he was there in 2 hours. Beach? Three hour drive. Our children get to see movies at the IMAX, they get to go to museums, to the zoo, to the aquarium, etc. We just have to drive a bit to get there. And that drive is worth every minute. The money we save living in this tiny coal mining town is astounding.
Plus, every person that graduates from our local high school gets their college education for FREE if they choose to go to the new community college that was just built two blocks away from the high school.
But, many of our graduates go to schools like Penn State University and Kutztown University. I love to compare our school district with other, richer ones on greatschools.com. We have a WONDERFUL school system (with excellent teachers) and have sent many a student to excellent schools such as MIT, Harvard, Yale, Duke, etc. Infact, many people who go away to become doctors, lawyers, teachers and engineers come back here to live. They have seen how much it costs to live outside this One Horse Town and are willing to eat the commute to save hundreds of thousands of dollars.
I know this town will either be "discovered" and fill up with transplants or rot b/c there is no industry (DH commutes about an hour each way to work). Either way, we will stay. It is cheap. CHEAP. If we lived anywhere else, I would have to work. We would not be able to do the things we are used to doing (eating out, going to the movies, amusement parks, WDW, beach, etc). We don't stress about taxes (although ours did just go up--I think they are creeping up on $1800 for the year), we don't stress about HOA dues. We just live life.
So, yes, there are still places that you can live for under $200K
