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Showing Original Post only (View all)These Are the 13 Cities Where Millennials Can't Afford a Home [View all]
These Are the 13 Cities Where Millennials Can't Afford a Home
Soaring home prices and stagnant wages combine to make home-buying in some cities a pipe dream for young adults
(Bloomberg) There's no place like home except when you can't afford one.
Millennials have been priced out of some of the biggest U.S. cities, with residential real estate prices rising even as wage growth remains elusive.
Bloomberg used data from the U.S. Census Bureau, Zillow Group Inc. and Bankrate.com to quantify how much more money millennials would need to earn each year to afford a home in the largest U.S. cities. The good news is that out of 50 metropolitan areas, 37 are actually affordable for the typical 18-34 year-old.
The bad news is that the areas that often most appeal to young adults are also the ones where homeownership is the most out of reach.

The biggest disparities are on the West Coast. Take the three Californian hubs of San Francisco, San Jose (the heart of Silicon Valley), and Los Angeles (where a developer is trying to sell one of the biggest homes in U.S. history for a record $500 million). The typical young adult in those cities doesn't even make half of what's needed to afford a home. .................(more)
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-06-08/these-are-the-13-cities-where-millennials-can-t-afford-a-home
88 replies
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If you didn't graduate with a BSCS, or equivalent computer degree, forget about finding a job
leveymg
Jun 2015
#1
No, but when you can retire at 40 and take another job, military retirement is a benefit others
haele
Jun 2015
#84
No,it's careless use of terms. The chart at link shows median residence cost, not mean.
Gormy Cuss
Jun 2015
#7
Detached single family (SFD) is the typical benchmark for a national comparison
Gormy Cuss
Jun 2015
#14
Detroit and Portland are big arts hots spots now and other cities as well.
Bluenorthwest
Jun 2015
#23
I agree with this; they should be comparing median income with median home prices.
alarimer
Jun 2015
#74
And this does'nt even take into account their student loan high-interest debt.
canoeist52
Jun 2015
#4
Is this assuming each milennial is single and trying to buy a house by themselves?
geek tragedy
Jun 2015
#16
Wherever there are millennials working for minimum wage that is a place the they cannot afford to
jwirr
Jun 2015
#26
Of course not but we were discussing them. My point is that not being able to afford a home is not
jwirr
Jun 2015
#50
If one's income is in the right bracket the deductions provide very strong incentive.
geek tragedy
Jun 2015
#61
Not to be morbid, but when our grandparents' generation passes we might inherit one
Recursion
Jun 2015
#52
That's like someone from Nebraska saying they can't imagine a home without a cornfield.
Romulox
Jun 2015
#70