Lodi News-Sentinel

Buying a Bay Area home now a struggle for tech engineers

- By Marisa Kendall

SAN JOSE — Bay Area home prices are out of reach for many middle-income families, but surely if you’re a highly prized engineer at Apple or Google you can afford a house here, right? Not so fast. These days even high-paid tech workers — the very people often blamed for driving up home prices — have to stretch to buy a house, according to a new study by Los Angeles-based real estate startup Open Listings. Techies do come closer to affording a pricey Silicon Valley home than teachers, service industry workers and scores of other workers. But home ownership may not be a given for them anymore, a shift that signals how the region’s explosive housing costs are shutting out even the prosperous.

“These highly paid, highly coveted people that are being recruited from all over the country or the world ... they’re unable to afford the housing that’s available nearby,” said Open Listings CEO Judd Schoenholt­z.

Software engineers at Bay Area tech companies including Apple, Google and Facebook would have to fork over more than 28 percent of their monthly salaries — a move frowned upon by financial experts — to pay for a home within a 20-minute commuting distance from their office, according to the study. The average software engineer at Apple, for example, makes $188,000 a year, and would have to spend 33 percent of his or her salary to afford a median-priced home in Cupertino, the study said. For software engineers at Reddit and Google, the mortgage and tax payments would total 32 percent of their income. Twitter engineers would have to fork over 30 percent, and Facebook engineers 29 percent.

Techies are unlikely to get much sympathy from other Bay Area workers struggling to make ends meet. Teachers, for example, who make a median salary of $72,340 a year, could afford just 0.4 percent of homes in San Francisco, according to an April study by Trulia.

But people whose mortgage payments exceed the recommende­d 28 percent of their income may have a hard time getting a home loan, Schoenholt­z

said. If they do get a loan, it may not be for the full amount of the price, which would force them to pony up more for a down payment. And for residents already paying high rent prices, saving up a standard 20 percent down payment is hard enough — not to mention a payment of 30 or 40 percent.

That means the dream of home ownership likely will elude some high-tech workers, which could hurt local companies’ abilities to recruit and retain employees, Schoenholt­z said.

“If that’s not going to be attainable, I wonder what the long-term viability of these companies (is),” he said.

It’s an issue already on the radar of many Bay Area tech companies. Last month, more than 100 tech executives and venture capitalist­s signed a letter supporting a bill by Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, that would make it easier to build dense housing near transit stations.

“The lack of homebuildi­ng in California imperils our

ability to hire employees and grow our companies,” the leaders wrote. “We recognize that the housing shortage leads to displaceme­nt, crushing rent burdens, long commutes and environmen­tal harm, and we want to be part of the solution.”

In Apple’s hometown of Cupertino, for example, Zillow estimates the median home value is $2.2 million — up more than 20 percent from a year ago.

Several companies are taking the matter into their own hands. Facebook is planning to build 1,500 homes on its expanded Willow Campus in Menlo Park, and Google is backing the developmen­t of nearly 10,000 homes as part of its new office developmen­t at North Bayshore, in Mountain View.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? The Boulevard housing developmen­t is seen from this drone view along Dublin Boulevard between Scarlett Drive and Arnold Road in Dublin. The project consists of five new neighborho­ods, three with townhomes and two with single-family detached homes.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE The Boulevard housing developmen­t is seen from this drone view along Dublin Boulevard between Scarlett Drive and Arnold Road in Dublin. The project consists of five new neighborho­ods, three with townhomes and two with single-family detached homes.

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