USA TODAY International Edition

Millennial­s buying in, with caution

- Paul Davidson

Tired of squanderin­g more than $2,500 a month on rent in downtown Washington, D.C., Tyler Hanson, 30, finally decided to buy a place for herself and her 4-year-old daughter.

But she had a non-negotiable rule: One of her biweekly paychecks had to cover all her fixed monthly bills, including mortgage, utilities and student loan payment. It took Hanson about 18 months to find a $340,000 row house that met her benchmark, and it was far from her preferred neighborho­od.

But Hanson has no regrets that she stuck to her guns even though she was qualified by her lender for a home costing up to $430,000.

“This is the largest purchase I’ve ever made,” says Hanson, a lobbyist. “I want to make sure I’m very comfortabl­e financially.”

Millennial­s have been driving home sales the past few years, but they’re doing so cautiously. About 76% of 22- to 38-year-old recent homebuyers spent less than 30% of their monthly income on housing costs in 2017, the latest data available show. That’s up from 69% in 2000 and 65% in 2009, according to Census Bureau figures.

“I don’t want to have all my money go

to a mortgage so that I can’t travel or have a drink or have fun,” says Hanson, who visited dozens of homes during her house hunt and routinely was outbid since she wouldn’t go more than a few thousand dollars above asking price.

Hanson also was frugal about her down payment, plunking down 3% of the purchase price.

Many young households “learned a lesson” from the drop in home prices a decade ago, says Doug Duncan, chief economist of Fannie Mae. “They’re being conservati­ve.”

Experts have long advised homebuyers not to spend more than 30% of monthly income on housing to avoid straining their wallets. Devoting too much income to housing costs also can make it difficult to continue making house payments in case of a job loss or unforeseen medical expense.

The share of frugal young homebuyers staying under the 30% incometo-housing costs threshold was just 54% during the tail end of the housing boom in 2006 and has climbed steadily since. It has been roughly flat at about 75% since 2013. That’s despite a strengthen­ing labor market and faster wage growth, and lending standards that increasing­ly eased starting in 2014 before leveling off the past couple of years.

A closer look shows millennial­s are being particular­ly prudent. The median income-to-housing cost ratio for 23- to 37-year-old homeowners has dropped from 18% in 2002 to 15.8% in 2017, the largest decrease among age groups from 18 to 62, according to Trulia, a real estate research firm.

Rick Morrison, a Redfin broker who represente­d Hanson, estimates that about half his millennial house-hunting

clients set very conservati­ve price ceilings and won’t exceed them even if they constrain their ability to find a suitable home. About 3 in 10, he estimates, give up without making a purchase.

Besides guarding against a potential slide in prices, there are other reasons millennial­s are being thrifty about home purchases:

Experience­s over things

Young people value other things, such as experience­s, above owning a home. More Americans in their 20s and 30s (56% to 79%) cited good health, financial security, leisure time and a happy marriage than home ownership (56% to 61%) as factors contributi­ng to a good life, according to a 2017 survey by market research firm Gfk Global.

Student debt burdens

Other expenses, especially student

loan debt, are making young adults reluctant to spend too much on housing, says Danielle Hale, chief economist of realtor.com, a website of real estate listings and tools. Student debt has hit a record $1.5 billion, with millennial­s on the hook for much of that tab.

“Student loan (bills) are out of control,” says Hanson, who has about $180,000 in college and law school debt that’s costing her several hundred dollars a month.

Job hopping

With unemployme­nt at a 50-year low and job openings near a record high, millennial­s increasing­ly are hopping from one job to the next, often with lags of weeks or months in between, says Daryl Fairweathe­r, chief economist of Redfin. As a result, she says, they want to build enough savings to tide them over, a goal that becomes less feasible if their mortgages eat up their income.

Diversifyi­ng investment­s

Just 48% of older millennial­s and Gen Xers believe real estate is a better long-term investment than the stock market, according to a survey commission­ed by Redfin in December.

“They don’t want to put all their eggs in one basket,” Fairweathe­r says.

Hanson, for example, says she wants to save up so her daughter can go to college.

Duncan says millennial­s’ prudent approach is generally healthy. At the same time, young adults who refuse to budge even slightly from their price or monthly spending limits “might miss some opportunit­ies to build wealth” through housing, he says.

Prices for entry-level homes – the category typically targeted by millennial­s – have jumped an average 8% a year since 2012, compared with 6.4% and 5% increases for mid- and high-priced homes, respective­ly, according to Trulia. That means millennial­s often may need to bid up to buy a house.

Hale agrees, adding that millennial­s should be aware of the trade-offs they’re making by remaining renters: Their rents will continue to rise, while payments on 30-year mortgages are fixed.

And Fairweathe­r notes young adults almost certainly will continue to get raises, lowering the share of income they devote to house payments over time.

For Hanson, the calculus was simple. Her landlord was about to raise her monthly rent by several hundred dollars.

Now, she’s paying significantly less for a home that needs some work but is about 1,100 square feet, compared with her 700-square-foot luxury apartment.

“I’ve been paying crazy rent every single month,” she says. “I didn’t want my mortgage to be sucking everything out of me.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Millennial­s have been driving home sales the past few years, but they’re doing so cautiously.
GETTY IMAGES Millennial­s have been driving home sales the past few years, but they’re doing so cautiously.
 ??  ?? Experts advise homebuyers not to spend more than 30% of monthly income on housing. GETTY IMAGES
Experts advise homebuyers not to spend more than 30% of monthly income on housing. GETTY IMAGES

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