Tiny House Sells for $1M, and It Is Really Tiny

What would you pony up for a one-bedroom, one-bath tiny house? If your answer stretches into the seven figures, you would've been a good candidate for an abode in California's Santa Cruz that did not come with a tiny price tag. The Sacramento Bee notes that, per Home Advisor calculations, the average tiny house commands about $150 per square foot—which would equate to a normal selling price of slightly less than $50,000 for the 328-square-foot home that sold last month in the Seabright neighborhood. Instead, that 1948 "vintage bungalow," as it's described, was scooped up for $1,025,000.

https://www.newser.com/story/312930/tiny-california-house-sells-for-not-so-tiny-price.html
 

What would you pony up for a one-bedroom, one-bath tiny house? If your answer stretches into the seven figures, you would've been a good candidate for an abode in California's Santa Cruz that did not come with a tiny price tag. The Sacramento Bee notes that, per Home Advisor calculations, the average tiny house commands about $150 per square foot—which would equate to a normal selling price of slightly less than $50,000 for the 328-square-foot home that sold last month in the Seabright neighborhood. Instead, that 1948 "vintage bungalow," as it's described, was scooped up for $1,025,000.

https://www.newser.com/story/312930/tiny-california-house-sells-for-not-so-tiny-price.html
People have too much money and not enough brains.
 
Well, if I had a million bucks, I would not spend it on a tiny house like that. I think that is a waste of money. I would love to have lots of money to waste, but I doubt I'd waste it. What? One man's waste is another man's necessity? ("Man" as in human)I think even $150/sf is ridiculous for such a small house. It is too small for just me, IMO.
What would you pony up for a one-bedroom, one-bath tiny house? If your answer stretches into the seven figures, you would've been a good candidate for an abode in California's Santa Cruz that did not come with a tiny price tag. The Sacramento Bee notes that, per Home Advisor calculations, the average tiny house commands about $150 per square foot—which would equate to a normal selling price of slightly less than $50,000 for the 328-square-foot home that sold last month in the Seabright neighborhood. Instead, that 1948 "vintage bungalow," as it's described, was scooped up for $1,025,000.

https://www.newser.com/story/312930/tiny-california-house-sells-for-not-so-tiny-price.html
 

@Tish
You could contact @Della who might be interested in buying your shed,
provided it does not have any more than one bathroom, of course!

😄🙃🙂
 


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