Starter home

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A starter home or starter house is a house that is usually the first which a person or family can afford to purchase, often using a combination of savings and mortgage financing. The term is common in the real estate industry to describe small one- or two-bedroom houses, often older homes, but sometimes low-cost new developments. The concept originated in the drive toward home ownership in the United States is derived from the idea of the "American Dream." As such, the starter home is a "starter" because the homeowners envision eventually upgrading to what the American Dream dictates as a larger house in a wealthier neighborhood, once they advance further in attaining financial wealth. Recent trends indicate most starter homeowners are moving to houses of their choice which may come in the form of a smaller condominium or older smaller home, which since the turn of the 21st century have become as coveted as single-family homes.

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[edit] Changes in the 21st century

In the United States, as real-estate market conditions continue to inflate and rise in major and medium cities where growth is fast, many starter homes are only affordable or available in metropolitan area outer suburbs. The American Dream of a new-build single-family home on a previously unused lot continues to move further out of urbanized areas to capture the lowest cost land. However as many areas in the nation experience urbanization in multiple clusters, states such as California experience diffused land economics where no low-cost land exists. This has caused many real estate developers to either develop many low-cost townhomes densely or large single-family mansions at high sale prices. The latter is frequently chosen resulting in starter-homes continuing to favor people in upper income brackets as the majority of a metro area's suburbs approach build-out and the distance to work ratio approaches a maximum. Factors that influence developers include land prices, perceived value, market demand, city planning law, construction costs, and maintaining profit margins.[1]

For the buyer's end, changing financial requirements and mortgage interest rates as low as half a percentage point may affect large groups of income brackets to not be able to finance market-determined affordable housing in the long-term. Personal income for individuals and families have also not kept up with market inflation and cost of living to overcome this.[2] While starter homes may be considered affordable based on income, the true cost of home ownership has historically not been reflected in actual financing.[3]

[edit] Efforts to increase availability

In locations with a lack of affordable housing, such as New York City, San Francisco, London, or Shanghai, it may be impossible for first time home buyers to find starter houses close to the city center.[4] To assist such home buyers, local authorities such as that in Santa Cruz, California, have re-zoned previously commercial areas for residential housing specifically to allow developers to build starter homes.[5] The Wall Street Journal tracks median home purchase prices of starter homes as part of its real estate index.[6]. Cities, whether suburban or the central core, have generally moved to a trend of master planned communities where large tracts of land are set aside for one complete build-out in order to maintain low costs to the developer and provide essential affordable and entry-level housing. Commercial and retail components are almost always included in these starter home communities.

[edit] See also


[edit] References

  1. ^ By Andrew Caffrey and Charlie Russo (2006-11-06). "Can the starter home be saved?". Boston Globe. Retrieved on 2007-10-08.
  2. ^ Les Christie (2005-11-08). Fewer new buyers can afford a home. CNN. Retrieved on 2007-10-08.
  3. ^ {[cite web | url=http://www.sightline.org/daily_score/archive/2006/02/07/the_true_cost_o | title= The True Cost of Home Ownership | author= Eric de Place | date=2006-07-02 | accessdate=2007-10-08 | publisher=Sightline Institute}}
  4. ^ In China, the Starter Home is a Non Starter, BusinessWeek, Jun. 8, 2006
  5. ^ Tiny one-bedrooms could be the new 'starter home' in Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz Sentinel, Sep. 27, 2006
  6. ^ Starter Home Index - November 13, 2006, The Wall Street Journal's Real Estate Journal (latest available data)