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Renting Surpasses Buying In Homeownership Affordability

Traditionally, the cheapest option for those seeking homeownership is to buy instead of rent. However, this is no longer the case for those in Memphis.

Ryan Miller, senior investment portfolio strategist at First Horizon Bank, said historically Memphians favored homeownership over renting since interest rates were reasonable, and payments were able to be divided over long periods of time.

However, in 2021 prices of houses began to drastically increase in a short period of time, with interest rates increasing as well. These factors create higher mortgage rates. While rent has gone up, Miller said it hasn’t gone up as much as these prices and rates.

“It is very unaffordable to try and buy a home for most homebuyers in Memphis — especially first-time homebuyers,” Miller said. “Seventy-two million millennials are entering the housing market while supply from 2018 to 2020 decreased 52 percent.”

A number of factors have contributed to this revelation, such as the rise in median home pricing, median wage not keeping pace, and the national rank of housing affordability being lower.

Miller recently spoke at the Affordable Housing Symposium in Memphis back in May. During his research, Miller found that as of 2023 Memphis has a housing gap of 16,341 units and an affordability gap of $14,018.

“There are 569,954 units, but the need is 586,295,” Miller said, explaining where this “shortcoming” comes from. 

For those who can’t buy homes because of this shortage, their next option is to rent; however, in the city the median rental comes in at $1,224 a month. According to Miller, an individual would need to make $44,064 per year to qualify, while the median income in Memphis is $30,046.

“Basically, the median income in Memphis would have to rise by 52 percent in order for a renter to go rent a house with a ratio of just 33 percent of their overall income,” Miller said. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development classifies those who “pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing” as “housing burdened.”

Miller said one solution is rehabilitation. He said an answer to affordability is having builders who are focused on affordable and starter homes as opposed to “McMansions.” He said between 2018 and 2022, the housing supply shortage increased from 2.5 million units to 3.8 million units.

In comparison, 40 percent of homes built in the 1980s were starter homes, compared to 2019 where they only made up 7 percent. 

“You need investors to go in and buy up housing in areas where the homes are aged and rehabilitate them so that they can be put back into the affordable housing inventory,” Miller said.

In 2021, finance company Freddie Mac concluded that while the overall share of aging housing stock is less than 60 percent, an “overwhelming majority of the census tracts in the city center have shares of aging housing greater than 80 percent.” 

Areas that have houses whose best options are rehabilitation include Frayser, East Memphis, Whitehaven, parts of Midtown, and more. Miller said rehabilitating homes in these areas would help the affordability issue.

To help cope with this issue, Miller said people should have a pooling of assets — having friends and family rent together. He also said education is a vital part of this as well.

“There’s a direct correlation between education, whether it’s at an educational university for traditional studies or a vocational school,” Miller said. “Education in one way shape or form allows somebody to get the job to have a higher income to bridge the gap for affordability.”

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Living Spaces Real Estate

New Homes: Better Than Ever

As an unsustainably hot housing market slows down to “real time,” buyers are seeking answers to lots of questions about how to find the right home. And while the old real estate saying about the three most important attributes being “location, location, location” still has some truth to it, today’s consumers are more savvy and discerning. Location is only part of the equation: It’s also about conveniences and amenities.

And for conveniences and amenities, it’s hard to beat a new home. Today, new homes are safer, more efficient, and more packed with popular amenities than ever.

Safety

Technological advances mean that today’s homes are safer, because new homes take advantage of breakthroughs in building science. Homes now have advanced electrical systems, hardwired smoke detectors, and fire-resistant construction details. Windows in patio doors and near stairways have tempered glass, which makes them less likely to cause injury if they break.

Efficiency

Home builders also have an ever-expanding array of products and materials to choose from to enable them to make a house more resource-efficient and water-thrifty. Many home builders participate in programs like Energy Star, promoting energy-efficient appliances, and WaterSense, promoting water efficiency.

“Green” building is another new trend that’s getting legs as builders return to age-old practices, such as siting a home to take the best advantage of sunlight and shade, and recent innovations such as solar shingles (not just solar roof panels), light-conserving windows, and insulation made from recycled materials. Innovation and consumer demand are combining to produce a “leaner” home. Technology has changed, and so has the market.

Lifestyle

Today’s new home plans reflect what today’s homebuyer wants: larger kitchens for family gatherings, bigger closets, ample storage space, and more bathrooms. Consumers are seeking greater ceiling heights, more — and bigger — closets, walk-in showers with multiple heads, three-car garages, and outdoor entertainment spaces with fireplaces and grills. And builders are responding with designs that provide these features.

In fact, that’s a big reason why people seek new homes. Consumers want value, but they also want choices. They want to pick their carpet colors, their cabinet styles, their light fixtures, and other design elements that help make a house a home.

The decisions shouldn’t be about whether it’s a good time to buy a home, because home ownership remains the American Dream, despite occasional highs and lows in the market. The decisions should be about personal choice: finding the home that’s right for the buyer. Choosing a new home helps make it a perfect fit. ■

Keith Grant is president of the Memphis Area Home Builders Association.

Categories
Living Spaces Real Estate

In Focus

When my wife and I used to daydream about having our own place, sometimes our wishful thoughts involved having an aquarium. But not just any aquarium: a big, wall-length sucker stocked full of petite darting wonders so crazily colored they look made-up. It would be a melting pot of South Pacific sea life, right in our own home. We wouldn’t even need a TV anymore, so tied up would we be in the little fish-world soap-opera panorama playing out in our living room.

So we dreamed big — nothing wrong with that. What we got, though, instead of the super-cool fish tank, was a koi pond full of leaves.

The folks who lived in our home prior to us had a pond installed sometime in the last couple years. The pond was actually quite attractive when we first viewed the home, late summer last year — landscaped all around with lots of large rocks, pieces of driftwood, and creeping plants. In the pond were live water lilies and anacharis and even fish! Several big goldfish, a school of little goldfish, and even a Kohaku koi (that last is up for debate) were in the pond.

So, we bought the house. Not because of the pond, mind you, but it certainly didn’t present a stumbling block. Once we took possession, I immediately began actively not dealing with the pond. By the time we moved in, it was almost autumn, and getting hands-on with the pond seemed like more of a spring thing. Besides, the fish seemed fine, and I would surely only screw that up by trying anything.

You live and learn. Fall happened, and the trees in our backyard did what comes natural, dropping leaves like gravity got increased tenfold. You know how they do. Bad news, though: Apparently in the pond with the anacharis and suspected Kohaku is some kind of leaf-attraction device. I’m pretty sure every leaf in the tri-state area loaned their leaves to my pond.

So that’s why a few weekends ago, I found myself leaning over the pond, up to my elbows in the water, fishing leaves out with my hands, pulling them carefully because I didn’t want to catch any fish. It was nasty business. This is what you get when you don’t cover your pond in the fall. I worked about two hours and didn’t get halfway done.

And I loved every minute of it. It was exciting to see the fish hearty and hale even though the pond froze over a few times during the winter, and nothing could take away from the fact that I wasn’t just cleaning out some dirty pond, I was cleaning out my dirty pond.

Home ownership, if it teaches you nothing else, instructs you on the rewards of being a little bold. You’ll no doubt do things you never thought you’d have to do, and not all of it seems fun on the surface. But don’t be too shy (I can’t bring myself to say “coy”) because, as they say, “El riesgo siempre vive.”

But I’ll be covering the pond this fall.

Greg Akers

greg@memphisflyer.com