The US home turnover rate in the first half of 2023 has fallen to the lowest in at least a decade as high mortgage rates compel owners to stay put, Redfin Corp. said.
Intrest rates have taken upwards of 100k of buying power from people, it's not surprising that people aren't selling houses unless they have to. Keeping rates low for over a decade was always going to cause things like this.
I'm not surprised at all. Even if I WANTED to move, we wouldn't be able to afford to buy our house back on the open market. We got lucky, and now we're stuck.
Building or buying up in this market feels like a dream, so we're slowly improving the house we have to fit our needs.
Yup I'm still stuck in the cycle of endlessly throwing away money to my landlord. Saving up for a house and then making payments on something so expensive at such a high interest rate is still a dream for me. Granted, I'm a sucker for avocado toast so at least I know why it's that way
Home turnover is generally a sign of economic mobility. People should be able to afford nicer homes a few times in their life, or move to pursue greater opportunities. Having 25% fewer homes being sold means those conditions that cause people to move (to hopefully better situations) are not occurring.
Yes, but we just had a pandemic, where most people were afraid to look for houses, afraid to not catch a virus that at the time was unknown. Then after things started returning to normal we got inflation, because supply couldn't keep up with demand so interest rates were jacked to stop it.
Then there's the thing that especially in some industries there's a massive push to keep working from home, so less motivation of moving.
I don't think the current statistics are surprising.
I would love to move. My house isn't worth enough for us to be able to afford to move. And it's a decent house in a decent neighborhood. The problem is, people want to leave this town more than they want to live in it.
This is me for sure. Would have moved, was looking, but rates shrink my potential pool of houses pretty small and the lack of anyone ELSE moving shrinks it even further. Decided to wait a year and try again.
1% sounds low but legitimately how many people in 100 are looking for a new house? Like thats still a shit ton of houses. I would say in my immediate friend and acquaintance circle I know about 100 people and in the last year one of them bought a house and another tried but hasn't succeeded. So that's anecdotally that's 2%.
God I hate the "let that sink in" fad. It's just an immediate intellectual turn off. I don't ever need to let it sink in and usually when people say it I doubt they have something so profound to need sinking in.