The Hottest Cities for Millennial Homebuyers
What do millennials want, anyway? Marketing professionals are paying millions to find the answer that question. What do they buy? Where do they work? Where do they live?
By now, it's pretty standard knowledge that millennials have a penchant for not staying in the same place too long. And once again, millennials are on the move, but not to where you think.
For years, millennials have been flocking to downtown city centers, choosing to rent instead of buy. They're drawn in by easy walkability to the places they love, multiple transportation options aside from their cars, and by just being in the middle of it all, whether that means restaurants and nightlife or culture and innovation. The theory: Millennials move for a good time - not for a long time.
However, it turns out millennials may not have been purposely shunning the suburbs, they simply could not afford them. In 2015, the largest sub-group of millennials (those born in 1990) turned 25, and the rate of millennial home ownership began to increase steadily, due to four factors:
- The end of the recession.
- Career advancement to higher pay grades.
- General increases in pay rates.
- They're reaching an age where they think more seriously about settling down and starting a family.