Renters Who Abandoned Their City Apartments During Covid Are Coming Home to a Crazy Leasing Market https://www.wsj.com/articles/renters-who-abandoned-their-city-apartments-during-covid-are-coming-home-to-a-crazy-leasing-market-11636650049?mod=Searchresults_pos1&page=1
Like many urbanites, Omer and Mor Granit left their New York City home during the pandemic, giving up the lease on their Brooklyn apartment. In December 2020, they moved to a rental cabin in Evergreen, Colo., with their three daughters, Mr. Granit said, enjoying skiing and wildlife spotting. Still, eight months later, they were ready to come home. “The lifestyle there is incredible,” said Mr. Granit of Colorado. “But our life is here.” Moving back home wasn’t as easy as they had anticipated, however. Before they left, the family had been paying about $11,000 a month for a triplex in Carroll Gardens, said Mr. Granit, 45, co-founder of the co-working space Mixer. When they returned in August, they found that rents had jumped about 30% and they couldn’t find a comparable rental in any of their desired neighborhoods. They started looking at homes for sale, too, but still came up empty-handed. At first they stayed in a Brooklyn hotel while searching for a new home, Mr. Granit said, but have since moved into an Airbnb near the girls’ school. “We couldn’t find anything when we came back,” Mr. Granit said. “It’s just unbelievable what’s going on in the market right now. We left in a Covid market and came back in this hyper-crazy Brooklyn market.”
It turns out you can’t go home again. At least, that is the case for many of the Americans who left their homes in major metropolitan areas during the pandemic, relocating to the countryside for more living space and access to nature. Now they are returning in droves as vaccines become more widespread, employers call their workers back to the office and schools reopen for in-person instruction. They are arriving to find bidding wars and skyrocketing prices in their former neighborhoods, where everyone now wants the same things: outdoor space, a home office, and move-in readiness.
你的hoa只涨50块吗?
看 美剧 Seinfield 里, 90 年代 美国房租才 几百美元
和德国类似
也不全是, 我涨了几百,回到疫情前了
房1:疫情前 $1400, 现 $2380 房2:疫情前 $2500, 现 $3150 房3:疫情前 $1800, 现 $2750 房4:疫情前 $1400, 现 $1950 房5: 疫情前 $1500, 现 $2350
年轻人早就回来了, 很多孩子学校开学了,家长也回来, 现在一房难求
亚省 是哪里?
https://www.wsj.com/articles/renters-who-abandoned-their-city-apartments-during-covid-are-coming-home-to-a-crazy-leasing-market-11636650049?mod=Searchresults_pos1&page=1
It turns out you can’t go home again. At least, that is the case for many of the Americans who left their homes in major metropolitan areas during the pandemic, relocating to the countryside for more living space and access to nature. Now they are returning in droves as vaccines become more widespread, employers call their workers back to the office and schools reopen for in-person instruction. They are arriving to find bidding wars and skyrocketing prices in their former neighborhoods, where everyone now wants the same things: outdoor space, a home office, and move-in readiness.
赞厚道房东,不过以后跟着市场价稍微涨涨也不算特别不厚道。
不是rent coontrol就可以啊
这是曼哈顿正常价, 本来曼哈顿就比弯曲贵
我的HOA一分没涨,但是去年临时加了个300多的covid fund收到今年12月
也不全是nice的问题,我不涨价,纯粹是因为现在的房客太好了,永远都是按时交租,如果有事找我,那肯定是真的有东西需要修。我也希望能留住他住的越久越好,相当于给好房客打折。
你这也太好了, 我们hoa每年涨1-2%
用cash买吗
是的,省心的房客留住就好,也不缺这涨的这点,少给我惹麻烦,省出精力来做别的投资赚得更多。如果有麻烦的房客,老是提要求的那种,肯定按市场价涨,变相赶走,我的房客里没有