Splenda
Well-Known Member
There is vasts swaths of this country with people living in it that for lack of a better colloquial term, live in "Bumfuck Egypt". Most of those places are rural or post industrial and property market is static pretty much for home prices and at best, are maybe keeping up with inflation with maybe a point or two more for property value increases.
These places will never see the 3X+ property value increases in a decade like other more urbanized areas because nobody is moving there to create the demand for high cost housing to be built or wanting to buy the houses already being there. Nor are they quaint places for retiring Boomer's or Gen X that want to cash in their high equity bubble from moving out of places like California and is why they have discovered Idaho, Montana and Wyoming and will ruin those affordable housing markets for the people already living there.
I thought we escaped the urban sprawl. In 2017, after living in Nashville for 32 years, we moved to a small town 70 miles away from Nashville. Our town is about 70 miles from Nashville, 70 miles from Chattanooga, and 70 miles from Huntsville. When we moved here in 2017, we purchased our 4200 square foot house on a cul-de-sac, built in 2004, for $335k. We also bought the .6 acre empty lot next door for $25k. Then the COVID pandemic hit, and more people were working from home. People were leaving California. In two years, the value of our home rose to $700k and the empty lot to nearly $100k. Our neighborhood has at least three new families that moved here from California, one with 11 people (and 9 dogs) living in it. I'm glad it seems to have slowed down, but the last 5 years have been crazy.
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