Why It's So Hard For Millennials To Buy Homes

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 4. 05. 2018
  • Buying a house is harder for millennials than it was for their parents' generation, but that doesn't mean all hope is lost. Depending on where you want to live, how much debt you have, and how much you have saved, buying a house might not be out of the question-if you're willing to compromise.
    Business Insider tells you all you need to know about business, finance, tech, science, retail, and more.
    Subscribe to our channel and visit us at: www.businessinsider.com/
    BI on Facebook: / businessinsider
    BI on Instagram: / businessinsider
    BI on Twitter: / businessinsider
    --------------------------------------------------
    Following is a transcript of the video:
    Alyssa Pagano: When I was born, the median price for a house was $108,900. Now, it's $337,200. Even if you account for inflation, that's about a 45% increase in cost. But buying a house is something I would like to do. So I'm trying to figure out if I can.
    The odds are pretty stacked against me. I'm a millennial, and I graduated college in 2010, right in the middle of the recession. When I entered the workforce, the job market was rough. Like many of my peers, I have student loan debt. And on top of that, there aren't very many starter or mid-price homes on the market. My personal financial situation has to do with choices I made. I changed careers at 27, I took out loans to go back to grad school, and I didn't manage to save any money before that. But that's not abnormal for someone my age.
    According to a LinkedIn study, it's common for millennials to change jobs about three times in the first five years after college. And in the eight years I've been out of college, I've lived in New York City the whole time. Median cost of a home here? $770,000. I certainly can't afford that. When I look at my income, cost of living and student loan debt, the idea of buying something as expensive as a house seems nearly impossible.
    My dream home would look something like this. Or this. But even if my boyfriend and I took our combined income of $100,000 a year, that apartment is a pipe dream. I went to Business Insider's own financial planner, Lauren Lyons Cole. I figured if anyone could help me, it would be her.
    Lauren Lyons Cole: When you're just starting out, you can calculate a general price range by taking your annual income and multiplying it by three. With a combined income of about $100,000 a year, that means a home that costs around $300,000 would be a good starting point.
    Pagano: That's not as bad as I was expecting, but I have no idea what I can get for that price.
    Cole: With a budget like that in New York City, you probably aren't gonna find that many options. So you might have to make sacrifices, which could even mean relocating to another city. But then you have to figure out what kind of job options are there, and how much could you get paid to do the work you want to do. You have to think about which amenities you really want and which ones you can do without.
    Pagano: I've always wanted some kind of outdoor space, like maybe a balcony. A two-bedroom would be nice... big windows... maybe a turret. What? I'm a millennial. I'm idealistic.
    Cole: Once you have an idea of what you can afford and what you're willing to give up, you can take the next step and start looking at listings that are available in your price range.
    Pagano: With the budget Lauren and I came up with, I browsed options in a few cities I could see myself living in. I wasn't amazed with anything I came across, but there were some that were nice. Not so much in New York, especially when I compare it to the apartment I live in now, which is below market rent.
    I also checked out Grand Rapids, Michigan because it was number one on Business Insider's list of best housing markets for millennials. There, I did find some amazing places within my budget, but I can't see myself picking up and moving there right now. For me, owning a place isn't worth living somewhere where I don't know anyone and I don't have a job lined up. So I think for now I'm gonna keep renting and try to save up for a down payment. Maybe in a few years the price of avocado toast will go down, and I'll be able to afford that dream castle.
    Maybe a balcony... a two-bedroom would be nice... big windows... maybe a turret.

Komentáře • 3,5K

  • @murilocruz7752
    @murilocruz7752 Před 6 lety +623

    Wages haven't even kept up with inflation.

    • @sharminchowdhury8872
      @sharminchowdhury8872 Před 6 lety +15

      Murilo Cruz the obvious answer .

    • @aalexttostado
      @aalexttostado Před 5 lety +16

      E X A C T L Y

    • @kenw6497
      @kenw6497 Před 5 lety +20

      Wages have always stay the same for so many years.

    • @bmw803
      @bmw803 Před 5 lety +29

      The problem is not wages. the problem is government that makes everything expensive. the FED doesn't help either. They all distort the natural flow of market pricing. A wage is worth what a person is able to do based on the nature of the job. That's achieved thru negotiation. 60 years ago, people made FAR less than today, but their dollar went further as business climate was MUCH more favorable than it is today.

    • @jinxd511
      @jinxd511 Před 5 lety +3

      @@bmw803 Everything expensive??
      USA have the cheapest Petrol ( excluding the middle east countries ) , Gas , Tech , Cars , Electricity , Food and have a Huge discounts and Thrift shops everywhere.
      Also USA have higher wages and lower taxes than 99% of the world.
      Here in Europe you may have the same salary but everything is more expensive + the tax is 40-45% not 25% like in usa and the HealthCare still sucks ass.. And thats only in Germany and Scandinavian countries.
      People in East Europe make like 300-400 Euro a month for 9 hours a day workday.

  • @doomtomb3
    @doomtomb3 Před 6 lety +2272

    Solution 1: Do not try to buy a home in NYC

    • @redarrowhead2
      @redarrowhead2 Před 6 lety +48

      Yep, far easier in my case: my parents moved out of their apartment in nyc by the beach and gave it to me and I instead helped pay off their cheaper home in Florida. They bought the apartment when the it cost about 8x less 20-30 years ago.

    • @jacobpatterson9440
      @jacobpatterson9440 Před 6 lety +3

      Thankyou!

    • @1Surge
      @1Surge Před 6 lety +53

      Leave NYC it’s not the only place in the planet. Same situation with California the US is huge plenty of places to live and be free.

    • @pewpewlazers5702
      @pewpewlazers5702 Před 6 lety +8

      I know, you literally have to be quite wealthy to buy a place in nice NYC neighborhoods

    • @1Surge
      @1Surge Před 6 lety +10

      Justin Mason that’s actually a pretty cheap house, but I see it’s all the way in the edge. I wonder why it hasn’t been taken. I’ve been to California and saw small houses for $700,000 in not so good areas so it makes me wonder about this one. Oh and buddy I make the money so I know it’s not impossible.

  • @yellowcat920
    @yellowcat920 Před 2 lety +84

    For anyone looking for the answer to why it’s so hard for millennials to buy homes - you can skip his video, it does not answer that question at all. Saved you 3 minutes.

  • @Lanatus
    @Lanatus Před 6 lety +497

    The difficulty of affording a house is the location. Making 100,000 will net you a mansion in some state and a bathroom in others.

    • @VisioningHail
      @VisioningHail Před 5 lety +67

      Usually making 100K a year requires to be in a city

    • @kix5365
      @kix5365 Před 5 lety +61

      @@VisioningHail hahaah right?? Anyone making $100,000 in the middle of west virginia is doing a lot better than someone making $100,000 in NYC...

    • @autonomous2010
      @autonomous2010 Před 5 lety +23

      Shit I would kill people for a 100K salary. Seriously.
      Around here the best you can hope for is a 30K salary.

    • @autonomous2010
      @autonomous2010 Před 4 lety +6

      @Bonnie Cull 100K CAD is 76K USD. Which... for raising a family is a pretty low income depending on the area. That and canada has an average 8-10% higher tax rate.
      I pull a 28K salary in America doing software engineering but it's just me and i'm pretty frugal. If I had to raise a family or take care of anyone, that would be highly impractical.

    • @autonomous2010
      @autonomous2010 Před 4 lety +3

      @Bonnie Cull Yeah I know the pay is horrible but where I work is basically the competition for India Outsourcing. So horrific pay but at least it's IN the country.... we get a lot of the crap work that nobody else wants to work on. I grew up in a shithole of a location so it was really the best opportunity I had at the time.
      I'm not too worried about it currently though because i've been using it as a stepping stone to build up additional capabilities as of the last five years.

  • @panamahub
    @panamahub Před 6 lety +1233

    Thid video doesn't answer the question what the title says. It's only blabalblablab my dream house

    • @AbrahamSalazar210
      @AbrahamSalazar210 Před 6 lety +21

      The video subtly implied it. In general, millennials are "idealistic" (as the woman in the video said she was) instead of being realistic; they have absurd expectations on the type of home they can get in relation to their earnings.

    • @double_joseph327
      @double_joseph327 Před 6 lety +1

      The title is not a question 😂

    • @Name-jw4sj
      @Name-jw4sj Před 6 lety +19

      Dude, Abraham, they literally said the median cost of housing in NY city is 770,000 how is that remotely making the "millennal" idealistic and having absurd expectations?

    • @Animefreak242
      @Animefreak242 Před 6 lety +12

      It was an excuse for her to talk about herself. Lazy reporting.

    • @Animefreak242
      @Animefreak242 Před 6 lety +5

      Abraham Salazar Millennials are not idealistic. Not according to the studies nor anyone I know.

  • @Defy_Convention
    @Defy_Convention Před 5 lety +227

    Student loans. Housing bubble. Done.

  • @SirBoberus
    @SirBoberus Před 6 lety +184

    As a fifteen year old, house prices terrify me. How will I be able to afford a home? I'm starting to save right now for one, but it's going to take a while.

    • @jinxd511
      @jinxd511 Před 5 lety +22

      America have it easy.
      Most European doesn't even own a house they live all they life in Rent house.

    • @nicholasschroeder3678
      @nicholasschroeder3678 Před 3 lety +9

      Kudos to you for thinking ahead👏

    • @austinhernandez2716
      @austinhernandez2716 Před 3 lety +30

      @@jinxd511 still much cheaper. And they have universal free healthcare, and great public transportation, and make higher wages, so overall it's much better.

    • @yequalsemexplusbee4322
      @yequalsemexplusbee4322 Před 3 lety +8

      Get an apartment. It’s better to start off small, then work your way up to a house. Don’t stress it

    • @jinxd511
      @jinxd511 Před 3 lety +10

      @@austinhernandez2716 no i wish i was american , only a couple countries in Europe are better than the US such as nordic ones austria switzerland etc. most arent

  • @Retro-Moon25
    @Retro-Moon25 Před 6 lety +415

    Starter home 300k? No wonder everyone is in debt smh...

    • @t.l.5755
      @t.l.5755 Před 5 lety +13

      Right! My dream is for a tiny home.

    • @TheOneWithComments
      @TheOneWithComments Před 5 lety +48

      @So So people want to live in the city because that's where jobs are. Small towns are small because of the small number of jobs. Any work I've found outside of the city paid next to nothing and some of the times the jobs were promised to a friend of the family or their neighbor. Don't just accept the popular opinion that every single person born after 1985 is entitled and lazy. We have hardworkers and lazy ass people but it's still not easy to set down roots with a house so a lot of us are not going to waste time and money on a home.

    • @jasonking3177
      @jasonking3177 Před 5 lety +8

      @@TheOneWithComments except you can live outside the city and commute to work. See the problem with millennials is that they think everything should be the exact way they want it, they shouldn't have to do anything that stays from the easiest plan.

    • @patrickmiller5125
      @patrickmiller5125 Před 5 lety +14

      In San Diego, starter homes are $500,000. No such thing as a home that is under that price unless it’s unlivable and in need of major repair and renovation smh

    • @stanbarley
      @stanbarley Před 5 lety +12

      Right! I got mine for 170k and it's in California. I think alot of people my age want the fancy life now. Not start slow

  • @Rashaadthegr8
    @Rashaadthegr8 Před 6 lety +1324

    Living in New York? Man you don't care about owning a house. You just dreaming. It's called moving.

  • @mriphone1000
    @mriphone1000 Před 6 lety +954

    The American dream is what our parents had, they could easily buy a house have two cars and only one person had to work. Not today. Wages are stagnate, 20percent aren't making what they're parents did and the dollar has degraded to buy nothing.

    • @jaysanchez4407
      @jaysanchez4407 Před 6 lety +137

      Baby boomers ruined the economy

    • @PaganTeapot
      @PaganTeapot Před 6 lety +35

      "Older" people are nit holding onto any jobs that millennials should be competing for. There is a ton of new CG, media, and IT jobs that didn't even exist.

    • @94fleetwood49
      @94fleetwood49 Před 6 lety +21

      Wierd. I have a house, 2 cars and living alone in my 20s.

    • @NoFlightPlan
      @NoFlightPlan Před 6 lety +18

      Yup. Me too. My wife doesn't work; she runs the house. We have six kids. I run my own business that was started with mowing lawns. I own my house, 4 trucks, 1 suv (only vehicle not paid off), 1 car, 1 motorcycle...it all comes down to being willing to do what those who are failing will not do. I dropped out of high school, but later graduated at 20. Then I dropped out of college before graduating. I realized I could make the same or more money hustling than with a piece of paper.

    • @Davidjune1970
      @Davidjune1970 Před 6 lety +26

      Your parents saved their money before they bought cars and houses. Interest rates were over 18% on mortgages, credit was tough to get, and wages were set up so low skilled workers got paid peanuts.
      The biggest difference is people bought local, food was grown close by, clothes were made nearby, people were not giant consumers, people lived within their means and saved.

  • @DogFoxHybrid
    @DogFoxHybrid Před 6 lety +184

    Everyone is shitting on people for getting into college debt, but that's what we were encouraged and expected to do in the 00's, and perhaps to this day. We're talking about 18 year olds who have worked their asses off to get good grades and take part in extracurriculars, while having almost no experience of the job market or the world outside academia. Hindsight is 20/20, but it seemed a reasonable investment to go to a good college as long as you majored in something relatively practical.

    • @ProducerTyler__
      @ProducerTyler__ Před 5 lety +13

      The trades are cheaper and more practical.

    • @For_Cruyff_Sake
      @For_Cruyff_Sake Před 5 lety +1

      Who needs a college degree when you can just be Jenna Marbles

    • @DusanMilko
      @DusanMilko Před 5 lety +8

      College isn't bad. People should go to affordable schools. I know way too many people that went to expensive colleges cause they wanted to be cool. Do community college for 2 years and then a public uni for 2 and you should be good. I did 4 years in public uni and college cost me 30k for all 4 years. Was able to pay it while in college too. Idk how people are ending college with 60k+ in debt. Went to expensive colleges I guess

    • @WouldntULikeToKnow.
      @WouldntULikeToKnow. Před 5 lety +3

      @@DusanMilko I went to a state school but I had to live on campus because my hometown was in a very rural area. The commute to school would have been 3 hours one way. Graduated with 80k in loan debt.

    • @DusanMilko
      @DusanMilko Před 5 lety

      @@WouldntULikeToKnow. I rented near my campus, was cheaper than on actual campus

  • @funny-video-YouTube-channel
    @funny-video-YouTube-channel Před 6 lety +470

    I did calculate the mortgage for 30 years, it was a lot more expensive than the rent + utilities.
    *The housing market* is not connected to reality anymore. The sellers expect to make ridicules profits.

    • @PradigyMusicman
      @PradigyMusicman Před 6 lety +45

      you're saying rent is more expensive than a mortgage over 30 years? haha, no. Your mortgage doesn't go up every year, and you can always rent your home for more than your mortgage.

    • @jamie49868
      @jamie49868 Před 6 lety +31

      Rent 30 years ago were 4x-5x less than they are now. My mortgage 30 years ago was $700, and a similar place to rent was about $700-800. My last mortgage payment was $700 and a similar place to rent is $2,500-$3000. I now am in the possession of a tremendous asset with taxes, insurance and maintenance to pay, and that comes to about $500 a month. I don't expect ridiculous profits, but if the market provides me them, then that it even better. Rent if you must, buy if you can.

    • @jsiszero
      @jsiszero Před 6 lety +17

      Can anyone guess who owns the house when you don't pay your maintenance and property taxes?

    • @Chewy427
      @Chewy427 Před 6 lety +22

      The sellers aren't the problem, price is determined by demand and supply. Population isn't the problem as more people can build more houses. Planning permission and nimbies are the problem.

    • @ErikPT
      @ErikPT Před 6 lety +15

      Deicidium It’s also the housing bubble of investors buying up houses like crazy like jeez, I know they want that as an asset but damn no wonder people can’t afford houses blame the real estate investors not the home owners!

  • @xiaweila7121
    @xiaweila7121 Před 6 lety +815

    Millennials referring themselves as millenials are the worst kind of millenials.

    • @privateemail5870
      @privateemail5870 Před 6 lety +15

      right hahaha

    • @94fleetwood49
      @94fleetwood49 Před 6 lety +21

      So true.........I never called myself that, sounds like they playing the "victim" card.

    • @xology81
      @xology81 Před 6 lety +9

      Saw your comment and somewhat agreed. Heard her say "What? i'm a millennial, i'm idealistic" i knew i had to come back and like this comment!

    • @juliooquendo220
      @juliooquendo220 Před 6 lety +2

      Yeah but at least i have a job and also being a millennial. So it is a win-win

    • @ThugByChoice
      @ThugByChoice Před 6 lety +2

      Xia Wei La my thoughts exactly.

  • @Ufos4dahoes
    @Ufos4dahoes Před 6 lety +47

    We're going into a 2nd Great Depression closely nearing the the 100yr annivery of the great depression.

  • @robandrews4815
    @robandrews4815 Před 4 lety +144

    Land is a good investment. For those that already have it.
    Mark Twain said: " Buy land, it's the only thing they ain't making more of"

    • @devilsslave1970
      @devilsslave1970 Před 4 lety +8

      *Netherlands intensifies*

    • @dumbmoot1708
      @dumbmoot1708 Před 4 lety +4

      They in NYC. You ain’t gonna find no land

    • @iwontreplybacklol7481
      @iwontreplybacklol7481 Před 2 lety

      Land is not always good investment. There is a piece of land I now that is worthless, it has no sewer hook up and the land is appraised at $30k and just getting sewer hook up would cost over $60k+ alone before any permit would be issued, lol. Moron who bought has been trying to sell for 10 years looking for some misinformed sucker

    • @someguyfromtheinternet5102
      @someguyfromtheinternet5102 Před 2 lety

      @@iwontreplybacklol7481 land like that.... depending on access... could make for a great parking lot.
      Thats what im doing now for 1 acre of land. No water. No electricity. Np nothing. Just dirt.
      I rent the space out for truckers. Im a trucker too.
      I charge other companies $30/daily. $180/weekly and $700 monthly.
      So far i got 10 trucks with tankers hauling hazardous materials. Its sporatic but the land makes around $3150/month

    • @animallovekingdom8103
      @animallovekingdom8103 Před rokem

      @@dumbmoot1708 buy a building destroy it there you go now you have land

  • @aprilchiu547
    @aprilchiu547 Před 5 lety +70

    Extreme high property prices happen in many big cities around the world. It is just very heartbreaking for millennials and Gen Z like us!

  • @T2VR
    @T2VR Před 6 lety +52

    100k dual income WITH a graduate degree. Ouch, thats not good at all.

  • @aresdiaz5537
    @aresdiaz5537 Před 6 lety +324

    Literally stopped caring when you said you’ve lived in New York City the whole time, no shit you can’t buy a house be realistic move.

    • @15751Chris
      @15751Chris Před 6 lety +4

      Anywhere but Austin, Tx, please for the love of god don't relocate to Austin!!

    • @bassman87
      @bassman87 Před 6 lety +26

      I'm assuming you didn't watch the whole video. she advocated this exact thing. she looked at relocating, however that meant finding another job, which means recalculating your income...which if she's being paid NY wages, most likely means taking a lower pay grade. see the cycle.

    • @15751Chris
      @15751Chris Před 6 lety +6

      Rockthemutt the trendies and liberals have already infested this city. With them the femnazis, SJW's, race sensitive have followed. This city must be purged muuuahahaaaaaaa

    • @l2xsniper1
      @l2xsniper1 Před 6 lety +1

      Even then and I agree with you, she's not completely wrong in general whether its NY or not, wages and living expenses are still out of balance no matter where you live. The real estate market is gutting people for every dollar they can to a point where they have barely any money left for anything else.

    • @DrewskiTheLegend
      @DrewskiTheLegend Před 6 lety

      15751Chris or Colorado Springs, it’s too crowded

  • @gbreeze99
    @gbreeze99 Před 4 lety +26

    Companies don't pay living wages but the cost of living is going up. It's not that hard to figure out.

  • @Nellywellum
    @Nellywellum Před 6 lety +80

    No... The problem is student debt and the fact that 42% of Americans make under $15 dollars an hour. 30,000 a year is not enough for a house. Hell, that'll barely cover an apartment in any major Texas city.

    •  Před 6 lety +4

      How did you get into that predicament? Aren't YOU responsible for making stupid decisions?

    • @kix5365
      @kix5365 Před 5 lety +37

      @ So 150 million americans are making dumb decisions??? Or were being oppressed by banks billionaires and corporations??

    • @jinxd511
      @jinxd511 Před 5 lety +8

      No one opress you to go to College with a dumb degree that wont make you any money in the future.
      My dad makes more money than 90% of college students and he have only high school diploma.

    • @kix5365
      @kix5365 Před 5 lety +41

      @@jinxd511 Its financial oppression, millenials are 100% being financially oppressed. Considering home ownership is down, Americans creating families and having children is down, americans starting storefront businesses is down. Wages are DOWN, while inflation SKYROCKETS. Most of my generation lives paycheck to paycheck, 50% of american make less than $45,000 per year. Your father makes that much money because he found a job during a time period where you didnt even need a nhigh school diploma lol. I hope you get some perspective cuz you clearly have none!

    • @jinxd511
      @jinxd511 Před 5 lety +4

      first of all i am not american.
      I live in a much poorer country and yes my father have a good job bcs its a family business and my comment was dumb bcs i was taling about College students in my country.
      MY father still makes much less than the avarage American.
      Americans have 1 of the highest wages and afrodable life style than 99% of people in the world.
      Come in Ukraine or Russia with 100-200usd minimal wage per month

  • @nexus4googleplay612
    @nexus4googleplay612 Před 6 lety +63

    I'm Gen X, and I don't have a single friend my age who owns their own home.

    • @mw87675
      @mw87675 Před 3 lety +2

      😢

    • @dusbus2384
      @dusbus2384 Před 3 lety +4

      That’s probably because you live in a blue state

    • @nexus4googleplay612
      @nexus4googleplay612 Před 3 lety +13

      @@dusbus2384 You guessed wrong.

    • @saininj
      @saininj Před 3 lety +4

      Gen X was handed a pretty raw deal too. X, Y and Z are all screwed.

    • @asm2614
      @asm2614 Před 2 lety

      I’m Gen X, too. All of my friends own their own home. The first home we bought in the 90’s is the one we still live in. If we’d kept moving, we wouldn’t own a home now. Prices skyrocketed in the 00’s and keep going up.

  • @stueygewy
    @stueygewy Před 6 lety +236

    Serious question: Why would anyone want to live in NYC? Outrageous cost of living, traffic is an absolute nightmare, over-crowded herds of people marching somewhere in a hurry, the lingering stench of garbage and emissions...

    • @LuckyK7777
      @LuckyK7777 Před 6 lety +46

      Stuey Collins It's the center of everything.

    • @starventure
      @starventure Před 6 lety +37

      Stuey Collins The alternative is Kansas, where they give you a house for free as long as you promise to stay a set number of years. I know a few who took that pill and ended up going nutzoid from it. Remember, cities and oceans keep your mind sharp. Live in the plains, and you either go nuts or become one of the characters there.

    • @leardvr
      @leardvr Před 6 lety +4

      Great if you're in a rent controlled place.

    • @PaganTeapot
      @PaganTeapot Před 6 lety +18

      I am a fan of any big city honestly. The multi-cultural vibe. Food from all corners if the Earth. I dont drive, you dont need to with public transportation. If you are lucky enough to have the skills to earn that big salary then it's heaven. Huge major business locate here for a reason. I literally walk to work. That said,..once you go into family mode it may be worth a commute to an outer bourogh. But that's personal preference.

    • @JessG_20
      @JessG_20 Před 6 lety +5

      It depends on personality. I'm really introverted and would hate living in NYC. I don't even enjoy visiting such places for a Vacation. Bleh!
      I can see why more extroverted types would thrive in a place like NYC though.

  • @apperusenpai
    @apperusenpai Před 6 lety +195

    Millennials can't afford homes because of that *D A M N A V O C A D O T O A S T*

    • @grapefives7762
      @grapefives7762 Před 5 lety

      xD

    • @lefthanded5473
      @lefthanded5473 Před 4 lety +2

      Swag Lord Millennials do like to spend $1000 on phones every year. Imagine if that went towards saving for a house.

    • @theradiantone415
      @theradiantone415 Před 4 lety +7

      @@lefthanded5473 only 300 years for a house, nice

    • @blusky3712
      @blusky3712 Před 4 lety +5

      ​@@lefthanded5473 millennials often spend more money on phones because many jobs requires them to have decent technology. most reliable, quality phones will cost more than $500 in todays world.

    • @4R53Hole
      @4R53Hole Před 3 lety +1

      I build avocado toast house

  • @iAnthony
    @iAnthony Před 4 lety +131

    Why is nobody talking about that she went to grad school and came out making about 50k a year while living in New York. I wonder what her degree is in

    • @annmaina1692
      @annmaina1692 Před 4 lety

      Is that more or less

    • @pwnage1731
      @pwnage1731 Před 4 lety +19

      Probably Journalism or Mass Media, considering she works there.

    • @bpaige12
      @bpaige12 Před 4 lety +9

      If she just packed up and move out of New York she would easily be able to buy a home

    • @justsamoo3480
      @justsamoo3480 Před 4 lety +11

      bpaige12 I mean she could, but moving where you don’t know anyone and there’s no great jobs like the one she has is not a good deal.

    • @kirara4953
      @kirara4953 Před 3 lety +6

      Social Justice, some garbage like that

  • @karamoss5756
    @karamoss5756 Před 6 lety +106

    I live in TN and I think no one much understands how much was lost when factories left the US. Around here boomers have houses, several cars, and a boat if they want and they worked at factories. I work at one now. A man there told me he made more in the 70s at a factory than he makes now. I had several others tell me they were making 11 or 12 dollars an hour or more in the 80s and 90s. They start asking for higher wages and then many factories left the US to pay slaves 15 cents an hour. The factory jobs that are left.. Some start at 8 or 9 dollars an hour, work 12 hours a day 7 days a week and fire you and bring in more temps as soon as 6 months are up no matter how good a worker you were. Ask for better and they will just threaten to move overseas. Im lucky to be making 12 now and working full time but only 4 days a week. Low skill labor is not supposed to buy you a house and cars and a boat they tell you now, but Im telling you that for the boomers it did.

    •  Před 6 lety

      NO one working in the 70s is working now. That was over 40 years ago. The REASON those jobs moved offshore is because they couldn't compete. Unions might have done well in the 70s but it was at the expense of all the rest of us in over-priced shoddy goods like Detroit cars.

    • @stephenshuman1
      @stephenshuman1 Před 5 lety +23

      Wages stagnating and rising prices

    • @WouldntULikeToKnow.
      @WouldntULikeToKnow. Před 5 lety +20

      @ so if you were in your 20s in the 70s you'd be in your 60s now. I see plenty of people in their 60s still working, my parents for instance.

    • @WouldntULikeToKnow.
      @WouldntULikeToKnow. Před 5 lety +11

      My dad got a job 35 years ago stocking grocery store shelves. He's at the same job now earning over $20 per hour, has the best health insurance you'll ever find, a 401k, and a pension. His youngest coworkers are earning minimum wage and lucky to get full time hours.

    • @Imperial0666
      @Imperial0666 Před 4 lety +3

      that was the generation before the boomers. A lot of the boomers can't even afford to retire.

  • @amanda.._..
    @amanda.._.. Před 4 lety +19

    My parents got an old small apartment for 200k and now it costs 600k. Talk about overpriced.

  • @lucjay9
    @lucjay9 Před 6 lety +22

    She didn't even mention the declining purchasing power of the dollar. Like that's not a problem?

  • @IznbranahlGoose
    @IznbranahlGoose Před 6 lety +3

    Since the 1970s a 3-bedroom home was the most common. In the mid 1980s there was a small surge of 2-bed and smaller homes but it's been declining ever since. Meanwhile 4-or-more bedroom homes have recently become the most common. It's hard to find starter homes because hardly anyone builds them anymore. Every new housing development I see is nothing but gigantic half-million dollar 4-5 bedroom mini-mansions.

  • @yeyonge
    @yeyonge Před 6 lety +168

    Its hard to find a cheap house, and if there is one, its haunted.

    • @thesenuts3219
      @thesenuts3219 Před 6 lety +3

      Yoga Prasidya Basically my home. Constantly keeps creeping up in the night. Horrifying

    • @user-zp8jv2yt7s
      @user-zp8jv2yt7s Před 6 lety +1

      Data Base like what type of stuff happens?

    • @gjergjcamaj5770
      @gjergjcamaj5770 Před 6 lety +16

      Just freaking charge them rent too they should get out then.

    • @yeyonge
      @yeyonge Před 6 lety +3

      Alexis Versa not till they really "play" with you

    • @cpufreak101
      @cpufreak101 Před 6 lety +7

      I can handle a few ghosts. Used to see some in my house but I seem to have yelled at them to go away and they did

  • @3v3y
    @3v3y Před 6 lety +420

    Everyone wants to have a nice house have a brand new car, have money for two vacations a year and still have a pile of cash leftover but that’s not the way it works you have to sacrifice one thing if you want something else

    • @d_wang9836
      @d_wang9836 Před 6 lety +8

      Unknown I don't want a fancy expensive car and I hate going out of house if it's not school. So looks like I won't be sacrifsing vacation or the car because there's nothing scarafise lol.

    • @thegloriousone8200
      @thegloriousone8200 Před 6 lety +37

      Unknown I think the problem nowadays is that millennial and us younger generation kids want to start immediately at the top. However that’s not how it works; you start at the bottom and move up

    • @neverevenheardofit
      @neverevenheardofit Před 6 lety +21

      It's like you didn't even watch the video. Where did she say she wanted that?

    • @pokiblue5870
      @pokiblue5870 Před 6 lety +8

      Kielates im a millenial but thank god i dont need a fancy car or huge house or vacations ! I just chill outside with my skateboard and rent a place at low price :] its so easy to survive with minimal money.

    • @1Surge
      @1Surge Před 6 lety +3

      It applies to work. I’m trying to get some guys to work with me but they don’t want to start at the bottom. But they don’t have the skills or drive to be at the lead.

  • @Fillup82
    @Fillup82 Před 6 lety +96

    We're all going to live in shipping containers.

    • @fbyi2940
      @fbyi2940 Před 4 lety +4

      More expensive😂😂

    • @devilsslave1970
      @devilsslave1970 Před 4 lety +5

      Ay, whatever keeps me out of the rain

    • @fredweller1086
      @fredweller1086 Před 4 lety

      And the problem with that is?

    • @fredweller1086
      @fredweller1086 Před 4 lety +2

      @@fbyi2940 No. I'm looking at a model that's 960 sf for under $100,000. Site prep appx. $10,000. I want a 5 acre lot: Another $100,000. Just over $210k total.
      Of course, you could get a much smaller lot, and pay even less.
      Don't be a lazy-ass millennial. Do some research, and some work.

    • @fbyi2940
      @fbyi2940 Před 4 lety +1

      @@fredweller1086 and where is the land? And what does millienal has to do with this? i am gen Z ,Are u a boomer?

  • @Coffeetime1991
    @Coffeetime1991 Před 2 lety +4

    I stopped buying breakfast and coffee everyday, according to boomers this will help me buy a house.... Saving $60 a week has not only not helped me buy a very over priced house sold by greedy boomers, but it has made my mornings less exciting and the thought of being hit by a car on my way to work not as bad.

    • @basileldose1719
      @basileldose1719 Před 2 lety

      ....daym bruda...thats a mad 1, if i were 2 give advice id probs say...go for cheaper alternatives I guess, like u can make ur own coffee n breakie? But thats true like the only way out of this is a high paying job, a business, being involved in real estate, stocks...or just all em tbh

    • @nicolewinters
      @nicolewinters Před 2 lety

      @@basileldose1719 he was joking and being sarcastic

  • @TheChangNetwork
    @TheChangNetwork Před 6 lety +492

    so she still has no real action plan in place to get what she wants.

    • @adamlax27
      @adamlax27 Před 6 lety +31

      She's going to give up avocado toast.. did you not watch the video? Haha

    • @TheChangNetwork
      @TheChangNetwork Před 6 lety +13

      but she just "feels" that its not worth it. she hasn't determined what actions she needs to take for it to be worth it and by what time.

    • @1Surge
      @1Surge Před 6 lety +9

      Not all millennials are like that the one that didn’t eat all that propaganda are doing ok. Some have even began to thrive I’m getting there also but we have to stop expecting that some one has to give us what we want. Nobody will do it so you have to do it yourself. And have a modest view of ourselves and realistic goals in this world. Seriously it seems that many think life is as easy as going to college getting a title in a random career and become a millionaire. When they see how false it is they go into panic and think life is that way and that you can’t even make ends meat without a college degree, all cause they don’t want to admit they are part of a scam, they were sold a false life.

    • @libbybollinger5901
      @libbybollinger5901 Před 6 lety +8

      Krishna Bakshi what, is she supposed to magically pick a six figure income job off of a tree?

    • @speedgonzalez659
      @speedgonzalez659 Před 6 lety

      She 28 you should have something going right now

  • @InvestingHustler
    @InvestingHustler Před 6 lety +15

    Quick answer inflation, cost of living is going up at a faster rate then the average income is . It's getting more expensive to live 👎

  • @maddiee7366
    @maddiee7366 Před 5 lety +4

    I am 30, married, have no student loan debt. I grew up very "socially economically disadvantaged" aka poor. My husband and I own a house that we bought shortly after the recession in late 2012 (our local economy was still recovering) ended and got a good interest rate. We purchased a $120,000 house with 3 bedrooms and 2 baths approximately 1980 sq ft. I went to some college, he never attended. Today we make around $55,000 together. We make it work, have retirement accounts and are working on building up savings, which most people I know my age don't have.
    Here's the thing, many millennials were sold this pipe dream that the ONLY THING they had to do to be successful was GO TO COLLEGE (repeat that 10x times) since before they were in high school. Every teacher, guidance counselor, coach and most parents drilled this into them. Taking out student loans wasn't seen to be a problem because along with this pipe dream they were told they would get jobs out of college (if it took that long) making $50K a year and would have the loans paid off in no time. Obviously this was not the case for many of them. So now they are stuck paying these debts and many have to work 2-3 part time jobs (as many employers have cut full time jobs and don't have to pay benefits) to make ends meet. Also many were never taught how to budget so even if they make decent money they have no idea how to manage it.
    I know some people will say "its because of their own bad decisions" and yes in some cases that's very true, but many people aren't really that smart at 18 years old especially when everyone you trust is telling you that this is a NECESSITY.
    I'm not saying it's not their fault but it's not JUST their fault either.

    • @jasonhoffman8298
      @jasonhoffman8298 Před 4 lety

      Explain how you were able to afford everything without college so the rest of us can do that

  • @Tom_Hadler
    @Tom_Hadler Před 6 lety +13

    Correct answer: bank leveraging ratios.

  • @surfie007
    @surfie007 Před 6 lety +21

    In Australia the government gives all uni students a HECS-HELP loan. It doesn’t count as debt and is paid off by automatically deducting a certain percentage of you income depending how much you make. At the moment if you make less than $56,000 per year nothing is deducted. The amount that is deducted starts at 4% and goes up to 8% for $104,000 per year or more.

  • @j.s.3414
    @j.s.3414 Před 6 lety +22

    Millennial...wife and I own a home, two cars, little debt, great credit...wife has two degrees, I have one...only 28.
    Oh and we married at 19 years old.
    Can't generalize an entire demographic.

  • @NotAsGoodAsItUsedToBe
    @NotAsGoodAsItUsedToBe Před rokem +1

    I'm 35 and, I just bought my house. It's a 4 bedroom, 2 full bathroom. I paid 55,000, my town only has 46,000 residents.

  • @Kimbeeerleeey
    @Kimbeeerleeey Před 6 lety +38

    Yea, I live in Silicon Valley, born and raised, and the average home price is about $900k+.... You can't even rent here because there are like 54237842378437843 temporary employees from Asia raising the cost of living here while contributing very little to the economy.

    • @emmarellda181
      @emmarellda181 Před 6 lety +5

      Same! I live in bay area and a house down the street of mine just went for 1.2 million. It was 2 bed one bath and less than 1k square feet. Housing here is nuta

    • @Kimbeeerleeey
      @Kimbeeerleeey Před 6 lety +2

      There was a house in the Mercury that mentioned a condemned house had just went for something ridiculous, like $900k... it was falling apart! And I'm terrified to drive around here now!

    • @ahmedhashmi3584
      @ahmedhashmi3584 Před 5 lety +1

      Yup..these companies have been using consulting companies from India and other parts of Asia for some time now.

  • @TheSaltyAdmiral
    @TheSaltyAdmiral Před 6 lety +185

    Regardless of this clip. The honest answer no "older" person can accept, is that it was a helluva lot easier for the previous generation to get by, economically. This is not rocket science, it's rudimentary math for crying out loud. Compare the average wages and average house prices, then and now.
    People who say just move to a shitty place no one wants to live, are missing the point that our parents didn't have to. Things are harder now.

    • @matthewjanke8221
      @matthewjanke8221 Před 6 lety +5

      I disagree. it was different but not easier. we have tools to better our economic position that were not available to them. for instance credit monitoring services. back in our parents day if they wanted to know their credit score they had to take a 20 point hit on their credit.

    • @theblytonian3906
      @theblytonian3906 Před 6 lety +7

      @Salty Admiral Have a tissue cry baby. LOL Easier? Did you mean like being the drafted to go to war or? Typical utterly clueless Millennial generation with its "the world owes me" whining entiitled mentality. You really do have NO IDEA WTF you are talking about. Signed a non-entitled Boomer.

    • @wanefelicia8779
      @wanefelicia8779 Před 6 lety +1

      Exactly

    • @emmarellda181
      @emmarellda181 Před 6 lety +8

      The Blytonian are you really that angry at 80 million people? You must live a sad life

    • @OurNewestMember
      @OurNewestMember Před 6 lety +13

      The Blytonian : the crying kid didn't remotely suggest that "the world owes him" anything...you made that up.
      Also, if you had read the comment, you might have seen the comment was qualified as "economically" -- so your arguments about "the draft or war" on their own don't translate well to personal finances.
      Also the "Millennials" actually have grown up under war, but maybe it would be more productive to hear a what war and the draft did to Boomers' development and finances.

  • @1120go
    @1120go Před 6 lety +85

    Because we get out of college with tons of debt and the workforce wants to hire us for a nopay "internship".

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 Před 6 lety +16

      1120go and who's fault is it you paid $30K a year to get a degree in philosophy of gender? HAHAHA sucker.

    • @RIfMlLVrdhpPYbHCcTqjnEFGgNyKku
      @RIfMlLVrdhpPYbHCcTqjnEFGgNyKku Před 6 lety +8

      You're correct. My engineering Co-op pays 26 / hr while the liberal art internships pay nothing.

    • @ErikPT
      @ErikPT Před 6 lety +4

      Shana the Multiboxer what even is liberal arts? Is it theatre? I’m a business undergraduate in accounting the financial industry is getting more competitive and I want to break into the world of finance too, my Supervisor told me liberal arts is a waste of time.

    • @jalapeno1119
      @jalapeno1119 Před 6 lety +7

      chris leonard less than 0.4% of all bachelor's degrees are in gender studies, so...kind of a weak joke.

    • @vmj255
      @vmj255 Před 6 lety

      Gee, same as it’s been forever...

  • @TV-xv1le
    @TV-xv1le Před 5 lety +7

    I like how she says you don't have a lot of options for homes that would cost 300k in NY. You literally have NO OPTIONS today.

    • @TV-xv1le
      @TV-xv1le Před 2 lety

      @Gucci Chan I pay 16k in taxes on my 1300 sq ft house right now on long island. Its ridiculous. I already had a tax reduction company tell me I might not even see a reduction due to new valuations NY is doing.

    • @hypothalapotamus5293
      @hypothalapotamus5293 Před 2 lety

      ​@@TV-xv1le I don't live in New York, but their tax assessments do not seem correlated with property values. Do rich people bribe the assessors or something?

    • @TV-xv1le
      @TV-xv1le Před 2 lety

      @@hypothalapotamus5293 Its long island specifically and has to do with corrupt teachers unions. My house for a small 1300 sq ft ranch was about 500k. My property taxes are 16k a year. Of that roughly 11k to 12k is just school taxes. The biggest kick in the nuts is having no kids. Our home values have no real basis in reality and our taxes are through the roof. The majority of teachers here are making over 6 figure salaries in just a few years. Most long term including 1st grade teachers are hitting 160 to 180k a year. Their pay is public info and anyone can lookup any teachers salary. Guess who pays for those salaries and how they get paid. I'm not against a teacher making good money but holy crap. 10 to 15 years from now I won't be able to pay the taxes anymore.

  • @aongizmo
    @aongizmo Před 5 lety +5

    So basically I need to move away from the city I currently live and work in to a city I don’t know to buy a home I can afford? What a load of crap.. we all know that any affordable home for the average middle class person is found in the ghetto. Even if you look out of state the cost of living is lower and would be able to afford a house with acres of land very cheap, but try finding a job that will pay you what it would cost to maintain the house and not to mention your hours of commute to and from your job and errands. Life has really been disappointing when you spend 18 years going to school 4 more in college.. now you get a job you think you wanted to pay back a loan that accrues interest.. you finish paying the loan and pull another out to buy a home that you will hardly be spending anytime in because of your job, family etc... day in day out working your ass off only to get ripped off by your government which taxes the crap out of you on money they should even be involved in. You grow old and retire yo find out all that money you put into social security is now impossible to receive. Is that really the meaning of life now a days.. seems that these days you can’t even stop or slow down to admire the world because everyone around you is so much in a hurry they will stomp all over you.. what a life..

    • @minas.831
      @minas.831 Před 2 lety

      Yes the problem is it’s a trap because if you stop you won’t survive.

  • @mattstelljes
    @mattstelljes Před 6 lety +340

    this video is totally out to lunch lol move out of ny and don't change careers at 27 while in debt lol

    • @AhsanRabeet
      @AhsanRabeet Před 6 lety +23

      Not everyone has the freedom to move to any city they want and have a nice job there waiting for them. She clearly mentions at the end that although there was a city that was very affordable she couldn't move there without a job lined up first.

    • @mattstelljes
      @mattstelljes Před 6 lety +14

      Rabeet Ahsan I certainly can't afford to go to any city either and have a job lined up, but she also has unrealistic ideas for what she wants lol you always have to sacrifice something

    • @stllbreathnbut_y1844
      @stllbreathnbut_y1844 Před 6 lety +9

      Matt Stelljes but...shes a girl and she wants what she wants! Surely it’s not her fault at all that she can’t get what she wants!

    • @mattstelljes
      @mattstelljes Před 6 lety +3

      StllBreathnBut_Y hahaha your right I totally forgot.. she should be able to get whatever she wants! Lol

    • @absentmindedjwc
      @absentmindedjwc Před 6 lety +12

      Cannot speak for her, but for me, changing jobs typically resulted in fairly significant pay increases. Maybe my generation would be more willing to stick with a company if they actually gave out raises/promotions like they did for previous generations.

  • @lStranger
    @lStranger Před 6 lety +15

    She's idealistic, when she should be a bit more realistic. Not all so called "millennials" think like her.

    • @lStranger
      @lStranger Před 6 lety +1

      chase sanchez
      Every generation has its ups and downs though. Imagine how it must have felt before the civil rights movement when most of your neighbors were racist. I just think it doesn't seem right for her to pin idealism on everyone within her age group. Live and learn.

    •  Před 6 lety

      Stranger - our country is WAYYY more racist now than it was 50 years ago. Someone is feeding you a lot of crap.

  • @JoshIsOnAMission
    @JoshIsOnAMission Před 4 lety +6

    I had to relocate, change careers, and start paying off debt. Aiming to buy a house in my mid 30's. 🙌

    • @JoshIsOnAMission
      @JoshIsOnAMission Před 3 lety

      @C C really depends your field. I was working in my field but wasn't making enough money. Went back to school and had a job the moment I graduated. Best of luck!

    • @10RBREEZY
      @10RBREEZY Před 2 lety

      @@JoshIsOnAMission What is your difference of income then and now?

  • @hedgeowlinvest7902
    @hedgeowlinvest7902 Před 5 lety +5

    we are all going to be dead in a few years waiting like that.

  • @tyrantkiller5388
    @tyrantkiller5388 Před 6 lety +12

    Keep renting.....a house will never be yours anyways, even if you payed it off completely. Even then you're stuck paying property taxes, and the government can seize your property whenever they feel like it.

    • @presiqnqnkov8391
      @presiqnqnkov8391 Před 6 lety

      AMERICAN REBEL wait what?
      You have property taxes on buildings and thry can seize it if you dont pay after you payed the full price ?
      Im stuck between wanting to making fun of you and feeling rly bad

    • @presiqnqnkov8391
      @presiqnqnkov8391 Před 6 lety

      They* make*

    • @tyrantkiller5388
      @tyrantkiller5388 Před 6 lety +5

      Presiqn Qnkov yea I had a hard to decoding whether you were trying to be sarcastic or not. Anyways, yea after you finish paying off the mortgage, even then you'll still be making payments on your home/property. The whole thing is scam in my opinion, but to each his own I guess.

    • @claimthecrown
      @claimthecrown Před 6 lety +1

      uh yea. they just tried to do that to a family member of mine last month!

    • @presiqnqnkov8391
      @presiqnqnkov8391 Před 6 lety

      we dont have that in my part of Europe ,but we have our problems too.
      cought*immigration* cought

  • @ldsdudeinca
    @ldsdudeinca Před 6 lety +8

    I empathize with her. I'm in the same situation, and have come to the conclusion that taking on 30 years of debt, out of nothing more than societal tradition- is not for me. Renting, stacking cash side and living a life.. are better options for me.

  • @DoodleThis
    @DoodleThis Před 5 lety +16

    I wish I could tell my younger self that college is a scam and to just be self-taught or even take classes in the city.

    • @minas.831
      @minas.831 Před 2 lety

      Yes it is a scam. I stopped going for my doctorate after two years because I realized it would put me in debt. No debt is better than any debt.

  • @chanceDdog2009
    @chanceDdog2009 Před 3 lety +3

    There is no "starter" homes.
    That's Realtor bullshit

  • @jamesxd6952
    @jamesxd6952 Před 6 lety +223

    She is literally so one dimensional it hurts my soul

    • @kyleweir689
      @kyleweir689 Před 6 lety +8

      LoL Dab xD "what, I'm a millennial? I blame every poor circumstance in my life on the year in which I was born!"

    • @jsiszero
      @jsiszero Před 6 lety

      Maybe she should switch priorities instead of chasing the shiny object (a home).

    • @leilanidru7506
      @leilanidru7506 Před 5 lety +2

      MrHoppers002 it isn’t the fact that she wants to own a home that is one dimensional. just the way she presented herself and her finances in this video. She took out an irresponsible loan and instead of working to save up for graduate school. When people takes breaks from their higher education like that it’s usually to save money so the debt is small as can be. She didn’t do that. But just shrugged her shoulders and said it was very common coz she’s a millennial. Then she described her dream home like she was a freaking Disney princess and shrugged her shoulders and said she’s a millenial when she knows damn well she should get as affordable a home as possible (out of New York🤦🏾‍♀️😒) while she pays of the massive debt she piled up. The entire video she basically made it seem like dumb financial mistakes and decisions are a side effect of being a millennial. Now We all know the statistics about millennials (selfish, greedy, entitled etc) but being born a certain year doesn’t automatically make u stupid.

    • @leilanidru7506
      @leilanidru7506 Před 5 lety

      MrHoppers002 oh ok😅😂🙃

    • @rock3tcatU233
      @rock3tcatU233 Před 5 lety

      AKA a basic white girl.

  • @dddhhh2612
    @dddhhh2612 Před 6 lety +7

    When I graduated 35 years ago, there was plenty of starter housing priced at 3 times my annual income. Since then, house prices have quadrupled, and annual incomes for starting graduates has only doubled. We live with the result.

    • @matthewjanke8221
      @matthewjanke8221 Před 6 lety

      and why do you think that is? its not sully and demand because as we already noted this generation is not buying homes. The reason is that the government started guaranteeing subprime mortgages. It used to be that banks only lent money to people that we proven good with money, now they give money to everyone knowing that when they default the Us government will bail them out. his policy was created with good intentions but has had terrible consequences on my generation, and was the driving force that created the 2008 housing market bubble. FYI the next bubble is currently forming once again.

    • @dddhhh2612
      @dddhhh2612 Před 6 lety +1

      Depressed wages and the hollowing out of the middle class are the primary reasons for this. Real estate price growth has remained steady (with some wild fluctuations), but wages have been flat for decades. This has been going on long before any bank bailout.

    • @TheRealEstateInformant
      @TheRealEstateInformant Před 4 lety

      Have you considered an FHA mortgage? FHA loans allow you to put down 3.5% when purchasing a home, however, I recommend consulting a mortgage professional and becoming preapproved to see if you meet the requirements. Learn more in this video czcams.com/video/zWKOj5mo0HE/video.html I hope this was helpful :)

  • @ammry3333
    @ammry3333 Před 3 lety +1

    Our parents generation cut off our legs & then blame use for not being able to walk

  • @RobbyFischerMusic
    @RobbyFischerMusic Před 6 lety +1

    The stock photo that is shown when she says “Grand Rapids, Michigan” is definitely NOT a picture of Grand Rapids, Michigan.

  • @romaromes
    @romaromes Před 6 lety +197

    Just because it's "not abnormal" or "common for millennials" does not mean it's the best thing, or even a good thing to do.

    • @player1111ful
      @player1111ful Před 6 lety +2

      spot on

    • @deef3
      @deef3 Před 6 lety +2

      Truth

    • @mortgort
      @mortgort Před 6 lety +2

      Exactly

    • @Tango_Hendrix
      @Tango_Hendrix Před 6 lety +3

      Amor Royer Precisely lol I just wanted to add in but I agree tho.

    • @cautarepvp2079
      @cautarepvp2079 Před 6 lety +3

      Amor Royer yep,just because everyone does it,you shouldn't follow

  • @Justice4x
    @Justice4x Před 6 lety +23

    Did she make this video just to embarrass herself

  • @makingthestartup3384
    @makingthestartup3384 Před 5 lety +6

    You can’t even buy an apartment with these 300k where I live. :__(

  • @hr6334
    @hr6334 Před 4 lety +1

    I am 38, teach for a living, live in a small town and I still rent. It sucks.

  • @dosadoodle
    @dosadoodle Před 6 lety +60

    The cost of a home is far higher than it used to be. Not to mention that college is now far more expensive and many students must take on debt that's on par with the mortgage of a starter home to get an education at a public college. Previous generations enjoyed affordable education, and then they burned that option so they could also enjoy tax cuts on the national credit card. Then they have the audacity to paint millennials as selfish and financially irresponsible. I guess if I voted like most in older generations to be the Takers Of Society, then I also wouldn't be able to acknowledge my role in the destruction of the American Dream.
    I got in on college and grad school right before the tuition super spike and left college from a state school without debt, in part thanks to rich parents. Not everyone is so fortunate.

    • @AdamSmith-gs2dv
      @AdamSmith-gs2dv Před 6 lety +4

      Dosadoodle The reason why kids rack up $100000 in college debt is solely due to living on campus which is over half of that $100000. It's still possible to get out of college with a minimal amount of debt, you just have to stay local and begrudgingly live with your parents for 4 years.

    • @NoFlightPlan
      @NoFlightPlan Před 6 lety +7

      WRONG.
      In 1988 the minimum wage was $3.35. That is $7.16 in 2018 dollars. Minimum wage in 2018 is $7.25.
      In 1988 the average annual wage was $19,334.04. That is $41,302.47 in 2018 dollars. The average wage in 2016 was $48,642.15. The average wage in 2018 is higher than in 2016.
      The average home price in 1988 was $138,300. That's $295,444 in 2018 dollars. The average home price in March 2018 was $369,900. But the average home square footage in 1988 was 1,995. In 2017 the average square footage was 2,571. That is a size increase of 28.9%, but the prices of 2018 homes are only 25.2% higher than 1988 homes. So homes, when adjusted for size, are actually cheaper in 2018 than in 1988.
      And the morgage intetest rates in 1988 were over 10%! In 2018 the rates are less than half that at only 4.5%.
      What's your excuse for failing now? Check the statistics and my math...and then when you finish crying, get to work.

    • @matthewjanke8221
      @matthewjanke8221 Před 6 lety +1

      The thing is you don't have to go to collage. and the degrees people are getting are becoming more and more useless.

    • @unorthodoxromance254
      @unorthodoxromance254 Před 6 lety +2

      Adam Smith I'm doing this right now. The only reason you should go into six-figure student loan debt is if you really, really want to be a lawyer or a doctor.

    • @jackshi3084
      @jackshi3084 Před 6 lety +5

      Nathaniel Hood where are you getting these numbers from? Your rate of inflation seems too high.
      But even in the event that they are correct, you forget two important factors.
      One - mortgage over 10% on a 138k house is more likely easier to pay off than 5% on a 276k house due to higher cost of living today. More property tax, hydro, heating, repairs, maintenance etc.
      Two. Cost of post secondary education was peanuts compared to today. Also most jobs that you require a post secondary education today you didn’t need back in 1988!
      So yeah I understand that there are people out there just complaining and saying wahh wahh give me this give me that, it’s so hard for me blah blah all the while sitting on their butts not doing anything but there are also people who are working their butts off getting nowhere.
      Just think about the bigger picture and do a little math. Did companies employ more workers domestically now or back in 1988? Did the developing countries like China and India not get a huge surge in GDP due to western countries moving their production there? Joe down the street used to be able to support his whole family working at an assembly line. Now he can’t even afford to feed his kid non-pulp orange juice.

  • @AlexS-oj8qf
    @AlexS-oj8qf Před 6 lety +77

    Because millenials prefer to lived in urban area, where the house available is limited and the demand is just unlimited. If you see the generation before, they tend to lived in outskirt of major cities, in sub urban or neigboring cities. These area are still expanding, there is a lot of space available to purchase and little to no competition getting it. What do you think of your chance, getting a room on 5th avenue or a house on Detroit? It's all back to the basic of demand and supply. The more people want something, the less the something is, the higher the price will be. Solutions? Spread the population.

    • @AlexS-oj8qf
      @AlexS-oj8qf Před 6 lety +1

      Herr Rodrigo Hernandez 9806 For the house price, as I explained above, things happens that cause the price to be in such range. They do have the technology, what di you think they are, savages? Also their expenses are basically the same, even more probably. They have trends that they have to keep up with, their house have 'modern appliances' that cost the same as our own today. Don't think that your flat screen TV cost more than their tube TV, when it first comes out, it's the most expensive shit people could have in their houses. It's like VR, expensive at first but get cheap over time. Also to remind you that current generation have both couple working for income, while past generation usually only have the husband working, should put into perspective.

    • @apoc0110
      @apoc0110 Před 6 lety +7

      The suburbs-rural houses within a 50 mile radius of where i live are houses starting at 400k. I looked them up and theyre crapholes too. Not new or decent but need repairs. Im afraid to look for urban houses

    • @JaneDoe-zt5ci
      @JaneDoe-zt5ci Před 6 lety +2

      Alex Shuysky even rural places are going up though, my old hick town has a population below 300 and houses there were 1200k a month rent on average, tiny closet sized 1 bedroom houses were 900 a month to live in the middle of nowhere and you wont get any good nearby jobs so you'd have to waste gas driving 45+ minutes to work unless you lived off a min wage salary of small shops around, which would be okay if you would like to not go broke paying rent

    • @richarda.w.4562
      @richarda.w.4562 Před 6 lety +9

      Then we should build more dense urban areas in all cities. They don't have to be high rise neighnorhoods but walkable with nearby shops and businesses like europe, japan, brooklyn etc

    • @ronluang
      @ronluang Před 6 lety

      Apoc Sentinel was

  • @jonahware5396
    @jonahware5396 Před 5 lety +2

    2:55 I dropped when I say that price! $300k for an 850 sf apt!?! I'm a millennial in Illinois and I'm currently purchasing a house for 171k and it's 1200 sf, 2 bedroom and 3 bath! wow New York should be ashamed of themselves!

    • @TKAM88
      @TKAM88 Před 5 lety

      Watch out for incoming taxes...

  • @minas.831
    @minas.831 Před 2 lety +3

    College is a scam. Unless you are becoming a MD, don’t bother, you can learn all the other stuff in the library.

  • @anthonythomas4485
    @anthonythomas4485 Před 6 lety +239

    This video is for upper-middle class millenials with spending problems. 100k a year should be more than enough to live comfortably. Live within your means or move.

    • @yerboyharry6139
      @yerboyharry6139 Před 6 lety +19

      Anthony Thomas My family of 9 lives off of my Dad's teacher income of less than 50k. Learn to to budget.

    • @Counter-Intuitive
      @Counter-Intuitive Před 6 lety +25

      The video is about why Millennials have it harder than their Parents. The Baby Boomer Gen had it easier bc budgeting wasn't as necessary as it is today. Higher cost of living + lower wages = working harder and longer It's that simple

    • @EpicWin1337
      @EpicWin1337 Před 6 lety +18

      I mean she is a upper middle class millennial and if she can't afford to buy a condo neither can anyone at or below her income level.

    • @Counter-Intuitive
      @Counter-Intuitive Před 6 lety +24

      Ken MacDonald. Sorry sir but you're factually incorrect. These are the things corporate media never tell you but wages have been stagnant while inflation & productivity have risen the early 70s, hence everything gets more expensive every year that passes

    • @scorpionz44
      @scorpionz44 Před 6 lety +17

      wtf, nothing is cheaper now, price always goes up

  • @yaboijuan4052
    @yaboijuan4052 Před 6 lety +396

    I stopped watching when she said she had a boyfriend.

    • @Benjaminvalko
      @Benjaminvalko Před 6 lety +44

      Public_ Juan glad to see someone out here respeccing wamen

    • @brianmitchell68
      @brianmitchell68 Před 6 lety +52

      Wimmins are always mentioning they have boyfriends

    • @vallanddess
      @vallanddess Před 6 lety +9

      Public_ Juan shes not all that, but check out the guns on Lauren, lol.

    • @exec9292
      @exec9292 Před 6 lety +4

      You like her

    • @johnjohnson3830
      @johnjohnson3830 Před 6 lety +48

      I don't think he was saying that because he likes her I think he said that because why would you buy a house with a your boyfriend or girlfriend? Like babe I don't know if I want to spend the rest of my life with you but let's go get a 2 year note on this house

  • @p52893
    @p52893 Před 3 lety +2

    Don’t dream, just start with your first house however small it only advances you to your next upgrade.

  • @meganmcgee5668
    @meganmcgee5668 Před 6 lety +73

    Business Insider, it's disappointing that you would put out a video that makes it seem like the norm for Millennials to make poor financial decisions that lead to not being able to buy homes. This video is also hard to believe in the fact that this person supposedly graduated from grad school and works in NYC and at around age 28 still makes roughly $50,000 (based on the statement that they have a $100,000 combined income). The video makes a generalization about Millennials and the home buying market based on the poor financial decisions of one person, and these generalizations are simply not true. If the video had provided evidence such as more realistic income or examples of homes in more average locations than costly NYC, it could have been a lot more convincing.

    • @TheMatthyssen
      @TheMatthyssen Před 5 lety +2

      Megan Bailey well, most of millenials I know are prone to make fatal financial decisions

    • @herbertreed4655
      @herbertreed4655 Před 5 lety

      Many college students and their reckless borrowing are well on their way to becoming members of tomorrow's homeless population. So sad.

    • @adamc3811
      @adamc3811 Před 4 lety

      I can understand where you are coming from, but what I cant understand is where you believe this woman had money in the first place? Making 50K a year after grad school is not really that far from the truth. A majority of jobs require extensive higher education and then pay 15-16 an hour. I wouldnt exactly call that a poor financial decision. More like this woman has an illusion of the american dream that was never actually there.

    • @TheRealEstateInformant
      @TheRealEstateInformant Před 4 lety

      One of the issues of most importance is for Millenials to find good starter homes. In this video, I will be walking our viewers through one of our recently renovated properties that makes a great starter home for Millenials. czcams.com/video/wwjPkw9is8A/video.html

  • @WheatSn4ckBread
    @WheatSn4ckBread Před 6 lety +183

    Soooo you racked up a ton of student loan debt, and you can't afford your dream home in areas with a high cost of living. The fact that you would even consider relying on the income of someone, who is not your spouse, to help pay for such a huge financial decision is scary.

    • @johnnastrom9400
      @johnnastrom9400 Před 6 lety +7

      ishtarNike -- just because you are desperate for the plain jane in this video does not mean everyone else is. What a dork you are.

    • @XBlueM0ndayX
      @XBlueM0ndayX Před 6 lety

      Yes, because a piece of paper saying "marriage" will make their relationship so much more stable than it already is or isn't. Idiot.

  • @SpiralBreeze
    @SpiralBreeze Před 6 lety +4

    I can't even afford a tiny house in the worst neighborhood in Detroit. I don't even have debt.

  • @Dark_Fusion19
    @Dark_Fusion19 Před 3 lety +1

    When three times your wage is only £19,500. Can't buy shit with that.

  • @Arday60
    @Arday60 Před 3 lety +3

    Not only does this video barely address the question it claims to answer, when it does it is entirely focused on her.
    Now, while millennials are indeed screwed over by the economy, she made choices that clearly affect her ability to buy a house in a negative way.
    For example, living in NYC on a combined salary of $100k, going into debt for a master's degree, refusing to consider relocation to another city.
    These are all legitimate choices, but she made them.
    Having a bad starting point sucks and makes things difficult, but if you make choices that cause further difficulty then you are just asking for punishment.

  • @TheCristallo83
    @TheCristallo83 Před 6 lety +21

    I'm a Millennial and I own my own home. 3/2 in a gated community with 4 pools, tennis courts, gyms, within walking distance to shopping. It's called I don't live in NYC.

    • @ch1ll1add.25
      @ch1ll1add.25 Před 6 lety

      TheCristallo83 gud for you. You could buy foreign homes with USD currency and they may be cheap too.

    • @elenavelasquez208
      @elenavelasquez208 Před 6 lety +1

      What city and state do you live in? Some of us are in Ohio and we don’t even have houses in communities like that.

    • @starventure
      @starventure Před 6 lety +1

      TheCristallo83 Do you share a pool with your neighbors? Is it a “community” pool?

    • @TheCristallo83
      @TheCristallo83 Před 6 lety

      Elena Velasquez Jacksonville, FL. Developers in the next county over are building the nation's largest man-made lagoon. Another community has a lazy river. Planned communities here are amazing.

    • @TheCristallo83
      @TheCristallo83 Před 6 lety

      starventure No I personally own 4 pools. 😒

  • @soulcleaner3578
    @soulcleaner3578 Před 6 lety +311

    Whats the point of a "starter home"? Can anyone enlighten me?

    • @brettsnyder5858
      @brettsnyder5858 Před 6 lety +183

      Ciro Amaya i think its to get a small cheap home. build up equity while still saving for a better home. eventually sell and move into better home

    • @robs5252
      @robs5252 Před 6 lety +92

      You get a house you can afford (maybe a three bed-1 bath), live in it for several years, do some upgrades, paying down the principal on your mortgage while the property (hopefully) appreciates. Then you can sell it, make some money on the deal for a larger down payment on your next home where you can move up into a bigger house with more of your personal wants and needs.

    • @c0cochan3l29
      @c0cochan3l29 Před 6 lety +48

      Ciro Amaya it’s a dumb idea unless your growing a family

    • @user-pc7ef5sb6x
      @user-pc7ef5sb6x Před 6 lety +24

      Equity loan, rent out the property. Sell the property, buy better home. Repeat.

    • @onestopfunstop317
      @onestopfunstop317 Před 6 lety +53

      It's affordable. It's called living within your means. And once you have enough equity built up, you can rent the house, or sell it, leveraging the equity.

  • @jasonyoung8430
    @jasonyoung8430 Před 6 lety +2

    Graduated from college with a degree in stem one month ago, gained tech skills that translated to a good job located not in a major metropolitan area, bought a car and put in an offer for a house today. It is not difficult to buy a house but when you go to college to get trained in something that tons of people already can do, your time isn't going to be worth very much.

  • @johna4488
    @johna4488 Před 3 lety +3

    Honestly the biggest hardship is saving in a world where everything requires money move to a small town or city less opportunity but more stability. Home cost where I'm from is 160 on the expensive side

  • @devinvalentine2955
    @devinvalentine2955 Před 6 lety +16

    Most of these comments are telling people to move out of big cities because it is too expensive. Sure the closer you live to downtown the more expensive it gets but that is not the full problem. Here in Arizona the housing market was one of the worse in the nation during the recession and now we are one of the most expensive. I've seen housing prices double in the past three years with a small makeover. The surrounding cities to phoenix are all overpriced as well with backed up traffic to get to and from phoenix. Towns up north from Phoenix are all over priced as well. One of the problems is so many people from California and Washington moving here because of their state laws and taxes. On top of that all new housing here in Phoenix and the surrounding cities are not your ideal starter homes. They are all luxury homes that are 1800sqf plus 45 mins from your job.

    • @Flashyfinancier
      @Flashyfinancier Před 6 lety +2

      Quiet Generation Arizona has the best raves though

    • @ErikPT
      @ErikPT Před 6 lety +2

      Quiet Generation Seriously? I was watching a video on finance and the lecturer instructed me to do an example on interest in real world markets and when I looked up the real estate for my local metroplex I was awestruck a shabby house worth $170,000 that’s smaller than my childhood home! Hmmm I think the housing market may be in another bubble again and that terrifies me.

    • @TheOnesmallwhisper
      @TheOnesmallwhisper Před 6 lety

      I wouldn’t move to Arizona if the united state government paid me to move there. No offense.

    • @Flashyfinancier
      @Flashyfinancier Před 6 lety +1

      michael baughman Arizona is a great place to live

    •  Před 6 lety

      LOL ... 1800 sq ft is NOT a luxury home, that's on the small side of a median sized home in DFW.

  • @InspireMe819
    @InspireMe819 Před 6 lety +9

    Stop buying crap: coffee

    • @angelgjr1999
      @angelgjr1999 Před 6 lety

      TheBagBalm Yeah because a cup of coffee is just as expensive as a house. Moron.

    • @fizpop01
      @fizpop01 Před 6 lety

      Angel Gutierrez *Facepalm* Over time, if you stopped buying coffee and other items that aren't necessary, you could save up enough money to buy a house. Let's say a cup costs you $3(I don't buy coffee so I don't know the actual price), and you usually drink one cup a day. You could have an extra $1000 a year. If you invested that money, plus the same amount every year, then you could have a lot of money. Even just saving it would give you a bit towards buying a new house.

    • @saininj
      @saininj Před 3 lety

      @@fizpop01 not everyone buys a cup a day, so your example is moot. A lot of people use this tone deaf approach of "just make your own coffee and you'll save enough." At best, you'd save $50, and that's not going to help you a house anytime soon.

  • @Alex-it2nn
    @Alex-it2nn Před 6 lety +4

    300k? Move to the country and learn to live in a budget

  • @brianriegel5236
    @brianriegel5236 Před 2 lety +2

    In other words your screwed. Especially now, this video was 4 years ago. Prices have doubled since 2018

  • @johnarnoudse7013
    @johnarnoudse7013 Před 6 lety +3

    Being a Grand Rapids native I love the shout out to my hometown. I'm also a landlord who owns property in GR and the surrounding West Michigan region. If you do plan on moving here for the cheap house there are a couple things you should know. One prices are starting to go up this is due to the backlog of foreclosures from the height of the recession final being sold off and because no one has really built any houses in the area in the past few years. House prices for quarter acre of land with a three bed two bath house are going for around $200,000 . So if your thinking of moving here do it sooner rather than later. Second, were a tad bit religious here, our nickname in evangelical circles is Little Jerusalem. Third I hope you like college football, hockey, art, craft beer, and people who are often described as having an incurable strain of Midwestern Nice personalities. Otherwise we generally like newcomers as we have a relatively high immigrant population from all over the world.

  • @tinytrashpanda2029
    @tinytrashpanda2029 Před 6 lety +4

    Wow American houses are way cheaper than here in Australia, my family is still struggling to find a good affordable house in Sydney. Old crummy houses here are like double the price of a New York small apartments.

  • @sharlin_naidoo
    @sharlin_naidoo Před 5 lety +1

    What software do they use for the graphics?

  • @CaapriceTube1
    @CaapriceTube1 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm 32 now.
    My goal is to be a home owner by 38
    realistically probably by 40
    in actuality 45

  • @Evan_Adams
    @Evan_Adams Před 6 lety +3

    I hate discussions like this. The 3x multiple doesn't work on west coast where much of the cost assumes appreciation as an investment.

    • @matthewjanke8221
      @matthewjanke8221 Před 6 lety

      yeah the 3 times rule is one based in ignorance. what you need to do is look at your budget and work backwards from their. if you don't have a written budget you have no business buying a house. first take how much you currently spend on rent and plug it into mortgage calculator. then lower the total mortgage depending on your payment plan, a starter home should not exceed a 15 year payment plan on a 30 year note. once you have determined your price range watch the market every day for no less than 4 months before even looking at a house. learn your market. you need to know what is a good price and what isn't. your relator will lie to you, because they want the largest commotion possible. So don't rely on them to tell you the information you need to learn it yourself. Then watch the market like a hawk. and be ready to pounce on that good deal the day it is posted. naturally raising your credit score is a necessary prerequisite for this plan.

  • @Jay-pc2ev
    @Jay-pc2ev Před 5 lety +16

    Maybe you shouldn't be living in New York tf? One of the most expensive cities to live in.

    • @redditstop1653
      @redditstop1653 Před 4 lety

      @@sb6162 130k that's very cheap where I'm at even in worse area

  • @organizedchaos4559
    @organizedchaos4559 Před 3 lety +1

    The reason houses are so expensive is because of supply and demand. There isn't that many affordable houses being build, more houses are being built for the wealthy than for regular people.

  • @abhaychavda3354
    @abhaychavda3354 Před 3 lety +1

    Such an educated well-spoken person explaining that she and her partner even together cant afford to buy a home. I dont know what to make of this

  • @brettpatetto6847
    @brettpatetto6847 Před 2 lety +3

    they dont make enough money.. 60 K a year is not alot of money today

  • @sadtoy1193
    @sadtoy1193 Před 5 lety +16

    Houses aren't being built, not enough space to build housing, old people won't die already, and millenials have a large amount of debt from college. Oh and people don't wanna move to the Midwest where nothing happens, so that's another reason.

    • @KirbyPwnz13
      @KirbyPwnz13 Před 5 lety

      I don’t blame them! I mean holy shit is the Midwest depressing and boring.

    • @ktanner11
      @ktanner11 Před 5 lety

      @@KirbyPwnz13 you must love the liberal shit hole you live in. the midwest is my home along with many others i like living in BFE i dont have too deal with moronic SJW's and crazy crime. it has its trade offs but i wouldnt trade it for ANY CITY

    • @SupGaro
      @SupGaro Před 5 lety

      Darren Krock stuff does happen in the mid west but up north there’s more jobs that have higher salaries and just more people which means more businesses

    • @stevecarter2226
      @stevecarter2226 Před 5 lety

      @Darren Krock mid west sucks. Unless your born and raised there and dont know anything else

  • @Davo-jd7ey
    @Davo-jd7ey Před 3 lety +1

    The x 3 rule is bs. Life isn’t that cookie cutter. When I purchased my home I did x 6.Since then my home has appreciated $30,000 and I didn’t pay $14,000 in rent.If I didn’t make the move I would’ve been -$44,000 right now.Millennials need to talk to each other about finances to learn from each other because we understand each other we are in the same situation for the most part.

  • @Wasserkaktus
    @Wasserkaktus Před 6 lety +2

    I'm a Millennial. I just bought a house with a mortgage and also have a mountain of student debt. It's scary, but hopefully I can advance my career enough to pay off my student debt first, and just keep paying my mortgage off normally (It costs about as much as an apartment anyways).

  • @ultrakwon
    @ultrakwon Před 6 lety +132

    Problem is supply and demand due to overcrowding in places like Los Angeles, SF and NYC. If more liberals and entrepreneurs from these cities relocated en mass to the underpopulated Midwestern cities with affordable housing like Cleveland, a la Portland, Austin, and Seattle, it would benefit all parties.
    EDIT: After many misinterpretations of my original comment, I decided to clarify what I meant... I know Portland, Austin, and Seattle are expensive today. They were examples of cities whose housing market benefited hugely from the migration of Angelenos. Thus my suggestion was that Midwest cities should also be added to the desirable destinations for American Dream-aspiring millenial hippies seeking affordable housing.

    • @MikeCraft28
      @MikeCraft28 Před 6 lety +9

      ULTRA KWON lol when they move out of the liberal cities and go to the suburban areas they will know what real life is, not living off well care all day and expect your dream to come.

    • @mobiledevto
      @mobiledevto Před 6 lety +10

      ULTRA KWON no its the Chinese using north america as a speculative market

    • @ultrakwon
      @ultrakwon Před 6 lety +13

      NotMike, the idea is not for liberals to come to the midwest and assimilate themselves into the blue collar economy. It's to galvanize the demographic with a deep enough talent pool to attract international companies and businesses like Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, etc.

    • @ultrakwon
      @ultrakwon Před 6 lety +12

      (O[][]O), you mean Los Angeles county, not North America at large; the Chinese are not investing in the Midwest.

    • @lukew67
      @lukew67 Před 6 lety +13

      Seattle is expensive

  • @RAYRAY-yt3hz
    @RAYRAY-yt3hz Před 6 lety +3

    Move to Chicago's inner city or apply for an apartment in NYC housing projects in the Bronx, it will be verry diverse.

  • @robertdeffenbaugh9004
    @robertdeffenbaugh9004 Před 2 lety +1

    I don’t understand how anyone can afford to live in New York.

  • @mcrane2653
    @mcrane2653 Před 6 lety

    Move to Somerville NJ. There is a massive amount of investment coming into the town. Home values are going up and developers are starting to look at houses away from the center of town to improve. It's a quick train ride to NYC. Stay there for a couple years then sale or rent the home and collect the equity or inflated value.

  • @Bigmiquimby
    @Bigmiquimby Před 6 lety +10

    I'm a millennial and bought my own home last year on the outskirts of a big city. It's very modest and I'm very happy with what I have. You can't just buy your dream home a few years after moving out of your parents house. Also, I only took a year of college, got bored and preferred to work my ass off instead and so far I'm better off than most of my friends with degrees. Mostly because most of them were art majors. It's not the economies fault, it's because you followed the "do whatever makes you happy" motto instead of looking at careers realistically.
    I moved out of my parents because I didn't want to burden them with supporting me. 5 years later I'm a homeowner and help my mom out with bills.

    • @gomezkenneth92
      @gomezkenneth92 Před 5 lety

      Same story for me .

    • @jborrego2406
      @jborrego2406 Před 4 lety

      5 yrs an able to buy a house where do u live

    • @joreyn7656
      @joreyn7656 Před 4 lety

      My husband and I bought our first house at age 30 and 27 respectively. We lived in a one bedroom apartment and saved for a bit first.

    • @VinceEnclaveJohnson
      @VinceEnclaveJohnson Před 2 lety

      Most likely Texas

  • @pawsnotclaws2772
    @pawsnotclaws2772 Před 5 lety +6

    Your first problem is living in NYC.

  • @brunobarros116
    @brunobarros116 Před 4 lety +2

    im 37 and have 4 apartaments and 1 house no college working in construction

  • @pacificxplorer
    @pacificxplorer Před 2 lety +1

    I’ve accepted that I’ll never own a home. Even if I did manage to get one I would be stuck working for the rest of my life to pay it off. Which is why I just live in a travel trailer