Too Big To Sell

Guest Post by Mike Shedlock

Wealthy baby boomers are trapped in homes that are too big to sell. They want to downsize but can’t get what they paid.

This was guaranteed to happen, and did. Baby boomers and retirees built large, elaborate dream homes only to find that few people want to buy them.

Please consider a Growing Problem in Real Estate: Too Many Too Big Houses.

Large, high-end homes across the Sunbelt are sitting on the market, enduring deep price cuts to sell.

That is a far different picture than 15 years ago, when retirees were rushing to build elaborate, five or six-bedroom houses in warm climates, fueled in part by the easy credit of the real estate boom. Many baby boomers poured millions into these spacious homes, planning to live out their golden years in houses with all the bells and whistles.

Now, many boomers are discovering that these large, high-maintenance houses no longer fit their needs as they grow older, but younger people aren’t buying them.

Tastes—and access to credit—have shifted dramatically since the early 2000s. These days, buyers of all ages eschew the large, ornate houses built in those years in favor of smaller, more-modern looking alternatives, and prefer walkable areas to living miles from retail.

The problem is especially acute in areas with large clusters of retirees. In North Carolina’s Buncombe County, which draws retirees with its mild climate and Blue Ridge Mountain scenery, there are 34 homes priced over $2 million on the market, but only 16 sold in that price range in the past year, said Marilyn Wright, an agent at Premier Sotheby’s International Realty in Asheville.

The area around Scottsdale, Ariz., also popular with wealthy retirees, had 349 homes on the market at or above $3 million as of February 1—an all-time high, according to a Walt Danley Realty report. Homes built before 2012 are selling at steep discounts—sometimes almost 50%, and many owners end up selling for less than they paid to build their homes, said Walt Danley’s Dub Dellis.

Kiawah Island, a South Carolina beach community, currently has around 225 houses for sale, which amounts to a three- or four-year supply. Of those, the larger and more expensive homes are the hardest to sell, especially if they haven’t been renovated recently, according to local real-estate agent Pam Harrington.

The problem is expected to worsen in the 2020s, as more baby boomers across the country advance into their 70s and 80s, the age group where people typically exit homeownership due to poor health or death, said Dowell Myers, co-author of a 2018 Fannie Mae report, “The Coming Exodus of Older Homeowners.” Boomers currently own 32 million homes and account for two out of five homeowners in the country.

Not Just the South

It’s not just big houses across the Sunbelt. It’s big houses everywhere. If anything, I suspect it’s worse in the north. There is an exodus of people in high tax states like Illinois who want the hell out.

Already big homes were hard to sell. Now these progressive states are raising taxes.

Triple Whammy

  1. Millennials trapped in debt and cannot afford them
  2. Millennials wouldn’t buy them anyway because tastes have changed.
  3. Taxes are driving people away from states like Illinois

Good luck with that.

For the plight of Illinoisans, please consider Illinois’ Demographic Collapse: Get Out As Soon As You Can.

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20 Comments
KaD
KaD
March 24, 2019 4:34 pm

When a house is over say $500,000 that severely limits the people who can afford to buy it much less maintain it. Lots of people would love a million dollar house but it’s SO far out of their price range it’s laughable.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  KaD
March 24, 2019 5:05 pm

Not in the DC metro area. I don’t see any houses even being built for less than $800k. That includes DC. Md and Va.

StackingStock
StackingStock
  Donkey Balls
March 24, 2019 5:26 pm

DB, are they still building in those areas with those prices?

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  StackingStock
March 24, 2019 5:39 pm

SS,

It is crazy. I am a real estate photographer for the DC metro area. It is crazy. Most new houses are built on top of torn down older homes. $1,000,00 tear downs are common. Even further out I see only expensive homes going up. Of course, there are condos going up but even they are high end with large condo fees. I don’t have data to back this up but I get around quite a bit as you can imagine.

Realtors are constantly telling me they are getting multiple offers same day as the listing goes active. No inventory. Yes, there is pent up demand. A shit ton of pent up demand…for AFFORDABLE housing which isn’t being built that I can see.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Donkey Balls
March 24, 2019 7:23 pm

wip,
dc is a different ballgame because of federal govt employment–
imo,you’ll only see a problem there if congress cuts spending radically–do you see that happening,nah,me neither–

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  TampaRed
March 24, 2019 9:00 pm

I call DC the imperial city. All $$ leads to DC and I hate this place. If my plan comes to fruition, I’ll be outta here quicker than falling on ice.

Dan
Dan
March 24, 2019 5:14 pm

Here in northern Nevada, we get a lot of Californians moving here to avoid, well… California. Most are older and retired, so they sell in CA and pay cash here with a lot of dinero left over (good on them, but I’m sort of envious.). One weird (not really weird, but unanticipated) trend is that single-story houses sell pretty quickly, but two-stories stay on the market a long time. Meaning older folks are realizing that climbing those stairs after turning 80, having a stroke, whatever, is just plain hard.

I get, almost daily, solicitations to sell my paid-off 1500 sq. ft. ranch from all the local realtors. Fuck ’em (for now). The article is spot on.

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
March 24, 2019 5:27 pm

I built a new home 2 years ago.2500 square feet….put a bunch down and the payments are 746.00 a month. I built this home to have family and friends stay with me when they visit…rather than a hotel room. That being said when I retire to my farm in 8 years or so I’ll build a 1,650 square foot house…that’s all I need.

Hans
Hans
  BUCKHED
March 26, 2019 7:14 am

Wife and I just completed a similar move as you’re contemplating. Sold our 2600 sq/ft home on a small lot, in a very high tax area and bought a small home (1700 sq/ft) on a large lot in a low tax area. Gives us breathing room when we both retire soon. Other than some furniture not fitting, all is working out well.

Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
March 24, 2019 5:54 pm

750 sqft, spray foamed, b/u generator, deep well w/heatline, de-fucking-lux kitchen and bath, 15 acres, hunting, stream, outbuildings. And i am starting to think about downsizing. Its ten more years of hard work at this rate to get it where i want to be. Upkeep and maintenance as you age on a largish property is a bitch. And i’m not that old. Workin on it since 2005. Ready to move back to a 500 sqft house on half an acre again.

mygirl
mygirl
  Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
March 24, 2019 5:59 pm

I don’t really want to spend my time cleaning house. Big house, lots of housework. I’m not affluent enough to afford a cleaning lady and these days they charge upwards of $200 per house. I’m thinking of snowbirding…..what holds me back is not wanting to spend most of my time in Walmart parking lots.

James
James
  Iwasntbornwithenufmiddlefingers
March 25, 2019 8:29 am

Eh,would stay put,sounds like a good setup finger.

Dutchman
Dutchman
March 24, 2019 7:41 pm

I have a $750,000 – 3,600 sq/ft, stone home on a small lake, built in 1950 – just on the Minneapolis border – about 7 minutes (by freeway) to downtown. There is always a demand for homes in my neighborhood.

New homes built in the suburbs – are either apartments or minimum $500,000+ single family homes – built like shit. I call them ‘sheetrock mansions.’

What I’ve heard from a realtor friend: Houses now ‘go out of style’. Before the subdivision is filled – it looks spacious. Then it gets filled – less desirable. Also, there are new fads in home building. After 20 years, the designs have all changed. It’s hard to believe.

TheBurningTruth-get rite or get left. Behind.....
TheBurningTruth-get rite or get left. Behind.....
  Dutchman
March 25, 2019 10:18 pm

Its called planned obsolescence. Engineered into everything for the last 45 years, at least. All done on economies of scale.

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 24, 2019 8:13 pm

The 3 rules of real estate. Location, Location, Location.

Here in Jackson Hole and I come across stupid people all the time. Wanting more then a 1,000 square foot pad. They opt to live in Idaho or Alpine Wyoming.

Stupid people never get that the Location is the luxury. And not all the bullshit.

And Location will always go up in value faster then (all the bullshit).

mark
mark
  Anonymous
March 24, 2019 9:02 pm

I don’t know Anon,

I have bought and sold five houses in four states and I’m building my Last Stand sixth…looking over my shoulder its been:

Timing…Timing…Timing…

subwo
subwo
March 25, 2019 12:05 am

Half a mil buys a modest new build in Thornton Colorado now. My son just put down money on a 3BR that can be expanded to five later. Small lot too. Plus the HOA that can only go up.

James
James
  subwo
March 25, 2019 8:32 am

I would never subject me self to a hoa on top of building codes/zoning ect.

Living in the sticks has many advantages,will stay with me sticks.

Boodreaux
Boodreaux
March 27, 2019 5:42 am

I call bullshit. A big home is awesome and everyone wants space its also a status sysmbol as i do not fall for the bullshit that millenials dont like to show off their status. The real issue is nobody taught them about money and how to succeed in society and they all thought getting a masters in underwater lesbian basket weaving was a great idea and way to get into college debt for 150k. Now they work for minimum wage and cheer bernie sanders on to increase that wage. THeir anger should be at the colleges and inflation of tuition for lying to them and steering them wrong. Oh they want the big assed houses and secretly they will tell you but they dont envy it or the people loving there. Thats the biggest difference of the 1980 family. They envied the Joneses. Makes one wonder is america gonna have mcmansions all falling apart and some abandoned as the boomers age in place with upkeep becoming unaffordable? Then the millenials will all be the rage, buying fixer upper mcmansions. Brought to them by home depot and the fixer upper channel with bank lending soecial finance programs to boot! All such a scam. All such a big circle.

Prof. Mandelbrot
Prof. Mandelbrot
March 27, 2019 5:56 am

As you all know and see the trend to smaller more efficient homes this leads to increases in rates for kilowatts from your power company as they will never tolerate lower annual revenues. Your mcmansion today may cost $8,000 yr now for all utilities but when you retire and your family of 5 is now just 2 with only the ac or heat working on the first floor your annual utility bill will be $14,000. Im bugging out and buying my minifarm this weekend and pray my mini mcmansion sells in a week as I have totally redone it, am very price negotiable. ANy takers? Great golf course lot within 12 miles of the ghettos! Hottest fastest selling area in my area!