Toronto Star

Toronto- area millennial­s want their own backyards

One million young people about to enter GTHA housing market, bringing higher prices, congestion

- TAMAR HARRIS STAFF REPORTER

Millennial­s may be delaying marriage and taking longer to move out of their parents’ homes, but when they do, their entry in the housing market is expected to drive up home prices and increase congestion in the suburbs, according to a new report from Ryerson University.

There are one million millennial­s still living with their parents in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area, and over the next decade, 700,000 of them will be looking to move into their own houses, according to a report released Tuesday.

While millennial­s — those aged 15 to 34 — are perceived as the generation stuck in apartments, the “bulk are expected to want home ownership and ground-related … housing with a backgy the yard” when it comes time to buy, report says.

There are, however, many obstacles. A millennial’s ability to move through the housing cycle “is being stifled by high housing costs and precarious employment,” said Diana Petramala, a senior researcher at Ryerson University’s Centre for Urban Research and Land Developmen­t.

“Affordabil­ity is out of reach for many millennial­s,” Petramala said. “The average income needed to buy a house in the GTHA requires six times more than what millennial­s make.”

The report suggests there could be more than 50,000 new millennial households created per year, as they begin leaving their parents’ homes.

That means demand for an already limited supply of homes in the GTHA will increase, “putting continued upward pressure on prices over the long term” and forcing millennial­s to take on high debt loads to become homeowners. Millennial­s will probably have to flee the urban core to find housing they can afford, which will in turn lead to longer commutes and more traffic congestion.

“Millennial­s don’t seem that different from the generation­s before them,” Petramala said. “They have similar spending patterns; they do want equal access to amenities.”

One way to find spaces for both affordable housing and amenities to cater to this generation is to create more mixeduse communitie­s, Petramala added. That way, the province can also retain members of this growing generation here, as opposed to losing them to cities that can meet their housing demands.

But before millennial­s purchase, they need to leave the nest.

“The large share of millennial­s living with a parent also reflects the fact that leaving the family home is getting hard,” the report says. Millennial­s between the ages of 25 and 29 are increasing­ly living at home: 41 per cent in 2016, compared to 36 per cent in 2006.

And while millennial­s are delaying life events, such as getting married and having children, they’re not forgoing them altogether.

“Millennial­s in their early 30s … seem to be catching up on family-life goals,” the report says.

“It seems like they are living in apartments as they get older,” Petramala said, “but that’s part of the housing cycle they’re in.”

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