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11 votes
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Is there a US housing shortage or not?
12 votes -
Dollar Street: Pictures of worldwide living situations arranged by income
7 votes -
The next affordable US city is already too expensive
17 votes -
Great, affordable downtowns that don't require a car?
Hi all, Yesterday I got the good news from my work that my remote work assignment is now permanent and I am free to live and work anywhere in the US. I get to keep my salary so really any place is...
Hi all,
Yesterday I got the good news from my work that my remote work assignment is now permanent and I am free to live and work anywhere in the US. I get to keep my salary so really any place is on the table for me and I wanted to get some feedback and advice from those who live or have lived across the US.
While I would personally be content moving to the middle of nowhere, my partner has been aching to get out of the suburbs of the Bay area and be around more people and things to do that wouldn't require her to drive places. Personally, I'm looking to take my rent price down to a maximum of ~$2100 per month for a 2 bedroom that will give us enough space to each do our remote work. Some places that I have been looking at are:
- San Diego, CA - not so affordable but has great dog beaches and vibrant downtown
- Chattanooga, TN - affordable but small for my partner and lacks the restaurant variety we have grown accustomed to in CA. Knoxville, TN may be a runner up.
- Kansas City, MO - I have nephews that I have neglected being a part of their life and this would put me within 30 minutes of being close to them. Apartments are dirt cheap in downtown.
- Richmond, VA - closer to my parents but haven't looked too into this. I grew up on the complete other side of VA but am willing to come back to the state .
- Chicago, IL - this place is massive and I have no idea what are the best places in the city to live vs. what to avoid. I have always heard Chicago is underrated and I'm not opposed to the cold. I like that they have tons to do but it isn't really close to family as I would like to be.
Anyways, I'm open to hearing about some underrated places and putting some time into researching them. Walkability and things to do are critical in selling the city to my partner who really doesn't want to drive to do anything.
27 votes -
A case study in NIMBY entitlement: The former mayor of Beverly Hills is so mad about duplexes
12 votes -
An unprecedented California program is already fulfilling its promise to house the most vulnerable
11 votes -
The housing theory of everything
6 votes -
Gov. Newsom abolishes most single-family zoning in California
21 votes -
Gavin Newsom signs bills aimed at creating more affordable housing in California
12 votes -
Buying a house relatively soon, lay your advice on me!
I'm in the market for a house, been looking pretty seriously for the past week or so. I've got two pre-approvals for mortgages, and I think I'll probably look for at least two more for fee...
I'm in the market for a house, been looking pretty seriously for the past week or so. I've got two pre-approvals for mortgages, and I think I'll probably look for at least two more for fee comparison purposes. I have yet to actually see a house unfortunately, since every house we try to view gets sold that very same day :/ Hopefully the streak is broken, since we have an appointment with another house today!
Anyway, who here has advice for (any part of the process of) buying a house? Things to look for when viewing a house, things to consider that the common person might not, tips for making offers, tips for not giving up because of the market, etc.
I'll lead with some tidbits that I've gained from asking around friends and family that have already bought places recently.
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Apparently, sending a personal letter to the owners with the offer letter has gotten multiple people a house even when their offer wasn't the highest. For example, my sisters friend knew the owners had a cat, and has cats herself. So in the letter she wrote, she mentioned how happy her cats would be laying on the windows and running around in all the new space and such.... and she got it! The owners realtor was kinda pissed.
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Try to find out the reason the owners are moving out. My sister and her husbands realtor asked around, and they were able to close on their house because the owner needed a quick turnaround to get out as fast as possible. They got the house for 60K under asking price because they were able to sweeten the deal to suit the owner.
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Location is (generally) more important than furnishings. You can add or remove things from a house, but you can't move it once you buy it.
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Once you make an offer on a house and the owner accepts, make sure the contract includes the following two parts that are (apparently) very important:
- House must appraise for at least the same value you've agreed to buy it at
- Inspection must show no more than
$buyer_defined_value
dollars of necessary repairs, otherwise the deal should be re-negotiated or considered void.
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Always leave enough money in your savings account to pay for any extras (because there are always extras) after the house is yours. New furniture, carpets, smaller repairs, paint, etc. You don't want to drain your account for the house only to find out you can't do anything afterwards.
I'm very excited (and exhausted already), but I want to make sure I'm as thorough as possible since I'll be spending the next several years of my life in it!
Forgot to mention(Thanks @Thra11), this is the US East Coast.
22 votes -
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Want to get rid of San Francisco's most toxic monument to racism and segregation? End single-family zoning
14 votes -
Homeownership can bring out the worst in you
14 votes -
Nesting as prepping
10 votes -
The end of "The End of San Francisco"
9 votes -
The city dwellers trying to build a tight-knit community from scratch
8 votes -
The quest for a floating utopia: Can casting away from established society to inhabit sea-based colonies save us from the problems of modern life - or are we bound to repeat our mistakes?
7 votes -
I'm moving between apartments soon. Do you have any advice or protips on the logistics of moving?
I've moved plenty of times before, but I've been in my current place for 4 years, which is fairly long for me - most of my adult life I've moved every 1 or 2 years. As a result, I'm sure I've...
I've moved plenty of times before, but I've been in my current place for 4 years, which is fairly long for me - most of my adult life I've moved every 1 or 2 years. As a result, I'm sure I've forgotten a lot of the "small but important things" about moving, and I've also gotten more settled into this apartment than any previous one I've lived in.
Details, if they matter:
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This is a relatively short move (within the same city, about a 15 minute drive)
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I'm going to be doing all the packing myself, moving small and/or fragile stuff myself, then hiring a moving company for the big stuff (couch, bed, TV, etc) because I don't want to put any of my friends in the position of feeling obligated to come help me move during a pandemic.
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I've hired movers before, but only for a cross-country move. This will be my first time having a moving company for just an in-town move
I found a previous thread about moving, but it was about adjusting to life in a cross-country move. I'm more interested in the logistics of how to make the move itself go smoothly.
22 votes -
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Kansas City's homeless camps rise as protests
10 votes -
Where would you live if you had no ties to where you are now?
The US emigration thread brought back a lot of thoughts I've had about leaving the UK, and I imagine a decent number of us have at least idly wondered about a serious move - especially after a...
The US emigration thread brought back a lot of thoughts I've had about leaving the UK, and I imagine a decent number of us have at least idly wondered about a serious move - especially after a year like we've just had.
For me, the difficulty has always been figuring out where to go: politics/climate/healthcare/lifestyle/language are a delicate balancing act, and I don't think anywhere's a slam dunk. Everyone's going to have their own take on what perfect looks like, and what compromises to make mapping that to the real world!
So let's assume you're packed and ready to go, nothing holding you back. You've still got to navigate inbound immigration, handle the language, find a job, all that good stuff - but the world is your oyster. Where would you choose to go?
16 votes -
Do any other US citizens think of emigrating?
I'm a 23 year old male originally from Southern California, and like the title says I'm curious to see if anyone else near my demographic has seriously looked into emmigrating in light of the past...
I'm a 23 year old male originally from Southern California, and like the title says I'm curious to see if anyone else near my demographic has seriously looked into emmigrating in light of the past year and a half.
What factors motivate you to move?
What would be an ideal location for you?
What timeline would are you looking at?One of the main motivators I seek to emmigrate is climate change. As the world continues to progress and evolve I do not think the United States will be able to equitabbly address the changing landscape and ways of life. As for when I would want to move, I'm not sure; currently it seems like a far off probability, but I know it's a choice I will have to make in my own lifetime.
33 votes -
Bakersfield, California just ended chronic homelessness
11 votes -
How the United States chose to become a country of homelessness
11 votes -
A beginner’s guide to Italian ghost towns selling houses for €1
22 votes -
Why the eviction ban from the US Centers for Disease Control isn't really a ban
9 votes -
According to Need is a documentary podcast in five chapters from 99% Invisible’s Katie Mingle that asks: What are we doing to get people into housing?
8 votes -
'Flexing their power': How America's richest zip code stays exclusive
8 votes -
Logging in to get kicked out: Inside America's virtual eviction crisis
7 votes -
Evictions have led to 10,000 additional COVID deaths
12 votes -
"It is terrifying to face the reality that people with a full-time job have to have a home inside a tent": photos of a Seattle homeless tent camp
10 votes -
The patchwork city: What gaps and overlaps in city boundaries tell us about values
4 votes -
Elderly and homeless: America’s next housing crisis
11 votes -
Thousands of DC renters are evicted every year. Do they all know to show up to court?
10 votes -
The rat tribe: Meet the million migrant workers living beneath Beijing's streets
7 votes -
How Covid reveals the ghoulish reality behind anti homeless propaganda
11 votes -
Donald Trump administration announces nationwide US eviction moratorium through end of the year
16 votes -
The eco-yogi slumlords of Brooklyn
6 votes -
Facing eviction, residents of Denmark's 'ghettos' are suing the government – evictions part of a sweeping plan to rid the country of immigrant-heavy areas by 2030
8 votes -
How does it feel living in a crypt? Impressions of one year later.
11 votes -
How the pandemic and a broken unemployment system are upending people’s lives
6 votes -
Denmark is a liberal paradise for many people, but the reality is very different for immigrants
20 votes -
Let's window shop for French fairytale homes
9 votes -
San Francisco tenants break leases in startling numbers, giving renters upper hand
12 votes -
A group of Copenhagen residents sued the Danish government Wednesday over legislation that authorized dismantling neighborhoods designated as ghettos
5 votes -
Why this woman chooses to live in a ghost town
6 votes -
How the Singaporean government solved its housing problem
6 votes -
Making a home that’s affordable, for good
4 votes -
Landlord says he won't collect rent because of coronavirus outbreak, urges others to do the same
8 votes -
How Denmark's 'ghetto list' is ripping apart migrant communities – cities are planning mass housing evictions in a 'social experiment' to encourage integration
7 votes -
The invisible city: How a homeless man built a life underground
10 votes