RadishRose
SF VIP
- Location
- Connecticut, USA
and it's creating a major problem in the real-estate market....Millennials aren't buying the large, elaborate houses built by boomers in Sunbelt states like Arizona, Florida, and the Carolinas, The Wall Street Journal reported.
These houses end up sitting on the market and selling at massive price cuts.
"Homes built before 2012 are selling at steep discounts — sometimes almost 50%, and many owners end up selling for less than they paid to build their homes," Candace Taylor wrote in The Wall Street Journal.
Younger buyers are also uninterested in outdated interior design.
"Design trends have shifted radically in the past decade," Taylor wrote in The Journal. "That means a home with crown moldings, ornate details and Mediterranean or Tuscan-style architecture can be a hard sell, while properties with clean lines and open floor plans get snapped up."
Millennials are often seen as a generation of renters, but many of them want to buy homes — it's just much harder for them to do so.
So, I'm thinking those of you with large homes might want to sell while you can get some profit.
These houses end up sitting on the market and selling at massive price cuts.
"Homes built before 2012 are selling at steep discounts — sometimes almost 50%, and many owners end up selling for less than they paid to build their homes," Candace Taylor wrote in The Wall Street Journal.
Younger buyers are also uninterested in outdated interior design.
"Design trends have shifted radically in the past decade," Taylor wrote in The Journal. "That means a home with crown moldings, ornate details and Mediterranean or Tuscan-style architecture can be a hard sell, while properties with clean lines and open floor plans get snapped up."
Millennials are often seen as a generation of renters, but many of them want to buy homes — it's just much harder for them to do so.
So, I'm thinking those of you with large homes might want to sell while you can get some profit.