The inability for younger people to buy homes

seadoug

Well-known Member
Location
Texas
There was an earlier thread discussing the proposal of a 50-year mortgage. I'm by no means for it.

I did want to share that I saw on the news today the average age of buyers for starter homes is now 40 y/o! Also, the median home price in the US, according to Redfin, is $462,206! I bought my first home at 26 y/o with a 14% ARM. It was a very basic new build 2 BR/2 Bath. It had linoleum/carpet and laminate countertops. We installed new, thicker carpet and hung grass cloth wallpaper in the living room, so it was cheap but we made it our own.

We built a 2700 sq. ft., 4 BR, 3 bath two-story house in the suburbs of South Florida in 1998 when I was 41. It was a great multi-level design but because we took the standard tile and laminate cabinets and countertops it cost less than $200,000. So few builders are even offering these options anymore.:(

I feel bad that so many young people can no longer afford what was once considered to be The American Dream.
 

It is a sad state of affairs, in my opinion too, @seadoug.
The American dream has become something different than it was in our day...
if the youth of America are dreaming about anything anymore or even have hope.
I truly feel bad about the future...

Personally, I've seen "this" coming for a while now. Both the housing market shrinking
and the growth in the lower-class... but the lack of recognition of either.
Even when folks in the Gov. talk about a need to open the market for first-time buyers,
the prices of their starter-homes are way outside the affordability of young people.

I think that it costs more to live the American lifestyle these days, but it seems to me
that the lifestyle is being shaped, somewhat, into corporate-America... and if they're not
part of a corporation, they're getting run into the ground.
I maybe I've just watched too many of those "dystopian future" movies. 😅
IDK...
 
There is always a reason for low price city and high price city. Even with the different neighborhoods in the sam city, there are alway reasons behind their price and affordability.
 
1.60 in '71 is worth 12.80 now according to google.

You made me go back and see what 3.35 would be worth today (2025) rather than 2024.
1985 wage in 2025 dollars: $3.35 × 2.97 ≈ $9.95 per hour.

Then, this tid-bit popped up. Average CPI in 1985: 107.6
Latest CPI (as of October 2025): Approximately 319.8 (based on BLS data through September 2025, with October estimates aligning closely).
Man... The dollar has taken a big hit for sure. 😠
 
You made me go back and see what 3.35 would be worth today (2025) rather than 2024.
1985 wage in 2025 dollars: $3.35 × 2.97 ≈ $9.95 per hour.

Then, this tid-bit popped up. Average CPI in 1985: 107.6
Latest CPI (as of October 2025): Approximately 319.8 (based on BLS data through September 2025, with October estimates aligning closely).
Man... The dollar has taken a big hit for sure. 😠
Yikes !
 
Aren't you all glad that you bought your home 40 years ago?
Heck, that was kind of like the midway point for us. We started with next to nothing and worked our way up. It only took 13 houses to get where we are today. (debt free). I'd love to take credit, but, without the love of my life, (the real brains of the outfit), I'd probably be living under a bridge somewhere.
 


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