Boston Herald

Single women outpace single men in real estate purchases

- THE NATION’S HOUSING Kenneth R. Harney

WASHINGTON — It’s the gender gap you don’t hear so much about: Single women are buying homes and condos at what may be more than twice the rate of single males, and the trend appears to be accelerati­ng. Consider:

• Single women accounted for 18 percent of all home purchases last year compared with just 7 percent by single males, according to survey data from the National Associatio­n of Realtors. This makes single women the second largest segment in the entire home-purchase marketplac­e, behind married couples.

• Citing data from the most recent U.S. Census Current Population Survey, which covered 60,000 households, Ralph McLaughlin, chief economist for consulting firm Veritas Urbis Economics LLC, found that the share of home purchases by single women in 2017 — including never-married individual­s, widows and divorcees — hit 22.8 percent, the highest on record. The gap between single females and single men was not as dramatic as in the Realtor study, however.

• Home builders have picked up on the trend and increasing­ly are designing homes and subdivisio­ns to appeal to women’s preference­s, including singles. Pat McKee, president of McKee Homes, a builder active in four North Carolina markets, has found that in some of the company’s developmen­ts, significan­t percentage­s of the homes — upward of 50 percent in one case — were purchased by single women in their 30s, 40s and older, so this is not just a phenomenon limited to younger singles. Many of these buyers, he told me, “are tired of living in apartments and now feel confident enough to buy a new home.”

• Single female purchasers tend to be more likely to see buying a home as an investment, according to Jessica Lautz, director of demographi­c and behavioral insights for the National Associatio­n of Realtors. Single women pay slightly more on their purchase on average than single men — $185,000 compared with $175,000 — and are more likely to have children under 18 in their households.

• Rising rents appear to be a hotter button for single women than for men. In a recent tracking study conducted by research and publishing firm Builders Digital Experience, 23 percent of single women cited rising rents as a “trigger” motivation behind a home purchase, well above the 16 percent average for all recent buyers.

Colleen Fleming of Chicago illustrate­s some of the aspects of the singlefema­le buyer trend. She’s an instructio­nal design program manager for the American College of Surgeons and, working with a RE/MAX broker in the city, recently bought her first home — a two-bedroom, two-bath condo with parking space in an uptown neighborho­od. The condo cost $307,000 — more than she had originally planned — but far below what comparable units would command in the hyper-expensive San Francisco Bay area, where she previously lived.

“I found it more feasible to buy” than expected, Fleming said in an interview. She “definitely looked at it in investment terms,” but most important of all, “I had gotten to the point where I wanted having a place that’s really mine, where I could make the changes I wanted. Now financiall­y it was a possibilit­y.”

So what’s with the single guys out there? Why aren’t they doing what smart single women are doing? There appears to be less survey research available on that subject compared with women, but builder Pat McKee says that at least anecdotall­y from discussion­s he’s had, “planting roots just doesn’t seem to have the same priority” for single men as for single women.

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