Here’s What Being “House Poor” Means — And How You Can Avoid It

 
 

Have you ever heard the expression “house poor” and wondered, “What exactly does that mean?” 

When someone uses this phrase, it usually suggests that they’re spending a large chunk of their monthly income on their mortgage and accompanying housing costs — things like homeowner’s insurance, property taxes, and HOA dues. While they’re building equity with homeownership, their budget is stretched thin and they may have a hard time budgeting for other expenses while they keep up with their monthly mortgage payments. 

Generally, financial experts suggest that you spend less than one-third of your monthly take-home pay on your rent or mortgage, says Danetha Doe, Clever Real Estate‘s economist and spokesperson, as well as the creator of personal finance site Money & Mimosas.

“Some signs that you are house poor include not being able to cover the expenses of necessities such as utilities, groceries, and transportation,” Doe says. “Other signs are if you are unable to contribute to your savings or investment goals each month.”

If you are currently in this situation, you can try to refinance your mortgage for a lower interest rate, Doe suggests, which will lower your monthly payment and free up some room in your budget. 

Here are some more smart strategies that will help you avoid becoming “house poor,” according to financial experts.

Don’t Wipe Out Your Savings When You’re Buying

The best antidote to being house poor is to plan ahead as much as possible, says Lauren Bringle, accredited financial counselor at Self Financial. Remember, a down payment isn’t the only cost associated with homebuying, Bringle says. “There are closing costs, repairs, maintenance, utilities, property taxes, and more to account for,” she says. “Build as much cushion into your savings as possible so you’re financially resilient.” For your budget-planning: Closing costs are typically 2 to 5 percent of your loan, and they can be rolled into your mortgage. 

Know Your Budget

Factors like excellent credit and a low debt-to-income ratio may help you qualify for a higher loan amount (and more favorable terms). But just because you can qualify for a higher mortgage loan, doesn’t mean you have to accept the full amount, cautions Bringle. “If you can buy less house, or find a home that’s a better value that still meets your needs, don’t feel obligated to accept the full amount, which would just mean a higher mortgage payment,” Bringle suggests. “Instead, pay for the amount of house you need, and take out the right loan to cover that amount.”

Get a Home Inspection

It’s a sign of the crazy homebuying times: Some buyers have been waiving property inspections to sweeten their offer. But unless you’ve got lots of cash to fix potentially costly repairs (A leaky roof! Cracks in the foundation! An aging HVAC system!), Realtors and financial experts advise you to get a home inspection. In a best-case scenario, the seller will get the problems fixed before you move in or give you a price reduction. But if not, at least you know the ballpark of how much repair expenses will be and you can determine whether they fit comfortably in your budget.

Another pro tip: Get estimates and bids on potential home repairs before buying a fixer upper and add extra to the budget for unforeseen expenses, says personal finance and money-saving expert Andrea Woroch.

Get more tips on Apartment Therapy.

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More Sellers Are Lowering Asking Prices

 
 

With mortgage rates now nearing 5%, many aspiring home buyers may have reached the top of what they can afford, especially as 40-year-high inflation affects the threshold for them.

As a result, the number of sellers dropping their asking price is growing at a faster clip than in the recent past. About 12% of homes for sale had a price drop during the four weeks ending April 3, according to Redfin. That marks a jump from 9% a year ago.

“Price drops are still rare, but the fact that they are becoming more frequent is one clear sign that the housing market is cooling,” said Daryl Fairweather, Redfin’s chief economist. “It goes to show that there’s a limit to sellers’ power. There is still way more demand than supply, and buyers are still sweating, but sellers can no longer overprice their home and still expect buyers to clamor at their door.”

Home prices are well above levels from a year ago. The average borrower is paying about 40% more than they would have for the same home a year ago on a monthly payment due to higher mortgage rates and higher home prices, according to the National Association of REALTORS®.

More consumers believe that mortgage rates and home prices will rise further, according to a monthly consumer sentiment index from Fannie Mae. “If consumer pessimism toward homebuying conditions continues, and the recent mortgage rate increases are sustained, then we expect to see an even greater cooling of the housing market than previously forecast,” Mark Palim, vice president and deputy chief economist at Fannie Mae, wrote about the consumer sentiment index’s findings.

However, some buyers may see an opening in the market. They may want to rush ahead of further mortgage rate increases or may see an uptick in new listings.

Housing demand remains high, Nadia Evangelou, senior economist and director of forecasting at the National Association of REALTORS®, writes on the association’s blog. Plus, a severe housing shortage due to underbuilding over the last decade will cushion the housing market from rapid deceleration.

“Housing demand will remain strong due to favorable demographics and shifts in buyers’ preferences as teleworking remains in place,” Evangelou writes.

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How is a Home Warranty Different from Homeowners Insurance?

 
 

Homeowners insurance and home warranties are both designed to help safeguard your home, but they each offer different types of protection.

A home warranty is an excellent supplement to a homeowners insurance policy, and a homeowner should consider purchasing both.

What is homeowners insurance?

Homeowners insurance covers loss and damage to your home or belongings caused by certain perils such as fire or flood. Most mortgage lenders require a homeowners insurance policy as a condition of granting the home loan.

What is a home warranty?

home warranty is a service contract that covers the costs associated with common home system and appliance failures.

Savvy home sellers and buyers understand the value a home warranty provides both before and after the home sale. Home systems and appliances don’t last forever, and a home warranty plan offers plan holders convenience, budget protection, and peace of mind.

Homeowners insurance and home warranties work together

Let’s say a dishwasher leaks in your kitchen, all over your new hardwood floors. While homeowners insurance may cover costs related to the water damage, a home warranty would cover the dishwasher breakdown.

Having both homeowners insurance and a home warranty is a smart idea. They can work in tandem to ensure coverage for the home and belongings within, including the home’s systems and appliances. Together, both types of coverage offer homeowners peace of mind and invaluable budget protection when covered home system and appliance breakdowns happen.

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Will the middle class survive a nationwide housing shortage?

 
 

In this current mad dash to find housing, the first 48 hours are proving to be crucial to either make or break a deal, especially for prospective middle-class homebuyers.

Just ask Jonathan Sigrist and Krystal Dickison of Charlotte, North Carolina. Within a 24-hour span, the couple saw a home they really liked, went on a tour the next day and put in an offer that evening. 

Their real estate agent had advised them the seller already had multiple offers. They better act quickly if they wanted it, she said, and even should consider making "certain contingencies." The couple agreed to some, including taking the home in its current state and offering $13,000 over the asking price.

It worked. The couple will close on the home later this month in one of the toughest housing markets in the country.

"It's happening. It was amazingly stressful. We're first-time homebuyers and we really had no idea what was going on," Sigrist said. "We both had mixed emotions, excited about the possibility of getting it, but also sad that we might lose it, all in a matter of hours."

Affordable homes in short supply

The scramble for housing for the middle class has been a struggle for decades, housing experts say. According to a 2021 study, “Housing is Critical Infrastructure: Social and Economic Benefits of Building More Housing,” commissioned by the National Association of Realtors, “underbuilding (has) placed a significant strain” on the for-sale housing market. The inventory of available homes available to buy has steadily declined even before the COVID-19 pandemic, which only exacerbated the problem.

Now, first-time homebuyers seeking to take advantage of still-low mortgage rates also must contend with a lack of affordable housing. This would also include millennials like Sigrist and Dickison wanting to be homeowners.

For example, Charles Maurer, a real estate agent based in Cleveland, said he could put a house listing up on a Friday morning and "get 50 to 60 calls by that afternoon" and likely have the home sold by Sunday night.

"Houses used to be on the market for weeks, sometimes months at a time," Maurer said. "Now we're surprised if they're not sold within two or three days."

Maurer, who said about 70% of his clients are middle-class, believes that "they are what drives this country's economy and have to be made a priority" when it comes to housing. 

Last year the median price of an existing single-family home jumped to an all-time high of $357,900, up 23% from a year earlier, according to the National Association of Realtors. About 94% of 183 metropolitan areas that were measured notched double-digit gains, up from 89% from the previous year, the organization said.

Home shortage of around 6 million

It was long thought that housing shortages occurred in only certain regions of the United States, such as the Northeast and Midwest, but now “the underbuilding gap extends across almost every major city in the country,” the Realtor-commissioned report said.

The report also said the housing unit shortfall ranges between 5.5 million and 6.8 million, despite an annual average of 1.5 million new housing units completed in the U.S. and a 1.7 million spike in 2020 alone. "New construction would need to accelerate to a pace that is well above the current trend, to more than 2 million housing units per year" to close the gap, the report said. 

"Even if building were to continue at the current level – the most rapid pace in more than a decade – it would still take more than 20 years to close the 5.5-million-unit housing gap," the report said.

The report came several months before House Democrats passed President Joe Biden’s now-stalled $1.75 trillion Build Back Better Act. The bill includes about $170 billion for what presumably would be the nation’s largest investment for affordable housing, with a goal to build or preserve more than a million affordable homes. 

Housing market outlook for 2023

That 1 million figure, however, may only scratch the surface. Jessica Lautz, the Realtor association's vice president of demographics and behavioral insights, estimates a nationwide shortage of between 4.5 million to 6.5 million housing units. 

While the association doesn’t estimate the shortfall of affordable versus higher-priced homes, Lautz said that "it could be argued the vast majority of homes needed today would be affordable properties as prices continue to rise out of reach to potential home buyers."

“There’s far more demand but less supply for housing overall,” Lautz said. “Naturally, affordable housing falls into that same category.” 

There’s long been a shortage of housing before the pandemic, said Jodi Hall, president of Nationwide Mortgage Bankers. Now the problem may be further compounded, Hall believes, by materials “sitting in the Suez Canal” because of hundreds of container ships being stuck on either side of the canal.

Hall also said there's a lack of incentives to build affordable housing, adding that the rising costs of supplies to build homes is a primary reason. 

First-time homebuyers must be 'the quick and the creative'

"First-time homebuyers need to be aggressive wherever they can to win outright," Hall said. "It's a big battle out there."

Brittany Lambrechts Camacho knows full well about the dearth of affordable housing. Based in the uber-competitive Washington, D.C., and northern Virginia markets, she said she's never seen anything like this in her 16 years as a real estate agent.  

She said first-time homebuyers now have to possess other traits besides having the money to get that house. 

"They must be the bold, the fast, the quick and the creative," she said. "Lace up your sneakers and let's go."

Lambrechts Camacho said middle-class and homebuyers in general also may have to make some concessions, including paying over the listing price, buying the home as-is and waiving inspections in order to be in the chase. 

"These first-time homebuyers are doing what feels like insurmountable things to get a home, and that makes me so sad," Lambrechts Camacho said.

Deal sweeteners to close out the sale

But that's the way the game is played today as homebuyers might have to add "deal sweeteners," said Bullock, the real estate agent in the metro Charlotte area who helped Sigrist and Dickison get their home. 

Those "sweeteners" could include paying any fees associated with due diligence (examining the physical and financial condition of the property and the area where the property is located), paying the seller's attorney fees or paying cleaning costs after the seller leaves the home. Buyers might allow the seller to stay in the property a month for free after closing as well as other contingencies, Bullock said.

"As a buyer, you might not have a lot of skin in the game money-wise, but you might have something that would be desirable to a seller," said Bullock, who urges homebuyers to have resources available ahead of time in case they must "pad their offer."

Sigrist, a software engineer, and Dickison, an interior designer, were grateful that Bullock, who worked overnight to help them with their offer, was available to guide them through their options.

Sigrist recalls the restless nights hoping their bid would be accepted. Dickison remembers that her heart was racing as well. "I kept saying, 'Maybe this is our shot,'" Dickison said.

The couple's new home keeps them within their neighborhood, near the apartment where they have lived for five years. With the move, Sigrist can still drive only 15 minutes to work downtown and Dickison will soon commute via rail. 

They have big plans, as Dickison sees their new home as more than just an investment.

Keep reading.

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What's next for these empty retail buildings in Colorado Springs?

 
 

Sears closed its two Colorado Springs stores in 2019, saying goodbye to the city after more than six decades.

A year earlier, Kmart turned off its blue-light specials and shut its last local store.

In 2015, a Sam's Club in the Springs closed to make way for another of the member-only warehouses in a new location.

When national chains and other well-known retail brands shutter large stores in the Pikes Peak region, they leave behind more than just empty brick-and-mortar buildings.

Their departures mean building owners and landlords inherit the challenge of filling the expansive spaces at a time when the retail landscape has undergone dramatic shifts because of changing consumer habits and the advent of online shopping.

Some national brands have downsized their number of stores and the amount of space they occupy; others increasingly focus on digital sales over shopper foot traffic; and several more have simply gone out of business.

The result: finding one traditional retailer to fill the space of another isn't so easy anymore in Colorado Springs and elsewhere.

And that's forced many owners, landlords and real estate investors to embrace a variety of new uses for their retail buildings, which might get chopped up for smaller tenants, remodeled or even torn down altogether to clear the way for a new purpose.

"You've got to think creatively about it," said Patrick Kerscher, a commercial broker with the local office of national real estate firm CBRE. "It's no longer, if one big-box retail tenant moves out, there's another two or three big-box retail tenants waiting in the wings to backfill the space.

"You've got to think of other users, other categories," he said. "From medical, to freight, flex (office and research), warehouse, education. Just anything creative to take over the large blocks."

Some retail building owners have done just that, opting to convert department stores, groceries and specialty retail spaces into gyms, family fun centers and light industrial uses.

Some examples:

• Kmart, which anchored the Fillmore Marketplace shopping center northeast of Fillmore Street and Nevada Avenue, closed in 2018. The building's California owner then gutted the 104,000-square-foot structure; it's now home to a VASA Fitness center and the RoadHouse Cinemas movie theater complex.

• Rustic Hills North, a 1970s-era shopping center northeast of Academy and Palmer Park boulevards, was once home to an Albertsons grocery, Longs Drugs and several smaller retailers. A suburban Chicago group bought the mostly vacant property last year and plans to convert three buildings and 207,000 square feet into light industrial uses, such as warehouses for e-commerce retailers; space for construction industry suppliers; and carpeting, flooring and tile showrooms.

• The Sam's Club that closed in 2015 along South Academy Boulevard stood vacant until it was leased by Amazon, which has remodeled the 135,000-square-foot space into a warehouse and distribution facility that the online retail giant calls a delivery station.

• Toys R Us, the national retailer, closed its 47,000-square-foot Springs store four years ago southwest of Academy Boulevard and Galley Road. A Denver company has converted the building into a self-storage facility.

The city's two Sears stores have provided both an opportunity and challenge when it comes to what to do with aging retail spaces  and their surrounding property.

The Sears at 2050 Southgate Road, in the Broadmoor Towne Center on the city's south side, was purchased by a real estate investment group a few months after the retailer closed in March 2019.

That group, headed by Magnum Shooting Center founder and co-owner Josh Beggs, moved quickly to transform the 142,000-square-foot Sears store for multiple uses, even as several buyers offered to take the building off the new owners' hands, Beggs said.

Magnum Shooting Center, which opened in November 2014 in the northside Polaris Pointe retail center, opened a second location the day after Thanksgiving in 2020 at the former Sears store at Broadmoor Towne Center.

The new Magnum Shooting Center has done well so far; it has more than 30,000 members and outperformed the first year of the north-side location, Beggs said.

Read the full story on The Gazette.

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