A smaller/older/cheaper home, specifically in a country where it is expected to be sellable for a profit later to “climb the housing ladder” with a more expensive house (and repeat until maybe downsizing after retirement).
Single bedroom house that is supposed to be a lot cheaper than the “family homes,” that would be in the same area. A 2 BR home may qualify as well. The issue is that they haven’t built any of these type of houses in over 60 years, and the prices are jacked sky high.
In this particular case a starter home is specifically an average of the bottom third of the housing market. Zillow recently reported that, using that as the metric, 242 American cities now have starter homes costing one million dollars.
The nationwide average for a starter home is about $200k, which is still a lot, but not the huge figure that’s been making the news this week.
What does starter home mean?
A smaller/older/cheaper home, specifically in a country where it is expected to be sellable for a profit later to “climb the housing ladder” with a more expensive house (and repeat until maybe downsizing after retirement).
Single bedroom house that is supposed to be a lot cheaper than the “family homes,” that would be in the same area. A 2 BR home may qualify as well. The issue is that they haven’t built any of these type of houses in over 60 years, and the prices are jacked sky high.
Think it was a rhetorical question, that $800k figure is crazy even by modern standards for a “starter” home.
In my state, $800k is 3,000 square foot, 4 bedrooms, rooftop balcony, in the capital downtown.
$400k gets you about the same, just like 5 miles from that downtown with more yard.
$200k gets you a thousand square foot townhouse built in 2004…
$75k gets you a thousand square foot mobile home built in 2020 on the outskirts of the capital…
No that was a genuine question, I don’t think I‘ve ever heard that term before.
In this particular case a starter home is specifically an average of the bottom third of the housing market. Zillow recently reported that, using that as the metric, 242 American cities now have starter homes costing one million dollars.
The nationwide average for a starter home is about $200k, which is still a lot, but not the huge figure that’s been making the news this week.
Sadly, that’s not the norm - LCOL areas perhaps, but 800k isn’t a wild number for a starter home these days.
Ironic as they’re part of the reason they’re so costly now, but: https://www.zillow.com/news/242-cities-now-have-starter-homes-that-cost-1-million/