Short-term fluctuations aside, In the mid- and longer-term housing prices always, always go up.
My house in California more than doubled in value in 10 years, even though I bought it in 2002 at what was then the highest $/sf in my neighborhood.
Due to the financial collapse in 2008, it did drop but by the time I sold it in 2015 it had more than regained all the previous value.
My house has gone up here in OKC about 40% in 5 years.
Like any investment (if you do consider your home an investment) jumping in and out and what gets you caught. Buying and holding real estate is pretty bulletproof (same is true with the stock market, BTW).
I've talked with people from: Colorado, Ohio, Washington state, Connecticut and New York who, in the past 30 days, are all moving to OKC area. I find it surprising, in part, because you constantly hear of locals complain how embarrassing our state politics are and yet that perception doesn't seem to hinder people from moving here.
I'm curious where all these out-of-staters are working.
It would be nice if jobs were the reason people were moving here but the big corporate relocations seem to be to Dallas Austin Houston.
I mean, we will have census data this year. It will be pretty easy to tell if OK had a large amount of migration/population increase or not.
I want to buy a different house right now. With what houses are selling for per sq/ft, we would have a lot of equity available to us. However, there’s such limited inventory right now, and we really don’t want to settle for our next house. We want our next house to be THE house. I don’t want to be forced to settle. I also don’t really want to build right now as it seems like all builders are doing what they can to trim anything to offset the cost of lumber. That’s not a situation I want to be in.
I wonder if there is a point where building houses out of aluminum studs is more cost effective than lumber?
This might be one of those things I learn on here but I've never seen an aluminum stud. 1000s of galvanized steel. Steel framing isn't load bearing so the structure of the house has to be completely different. With the outside walls and possibly a few interior columns hidden or otherwise supporting the roof. I don't know at what point lumber would be expensive enough to offset the engineering of a metal stud house.
I’ve often thought about using aluminum studs instead of lumber but it would be a pain mounting heavy objects like TVs on walls.
Construction costs in general are super wild right now. Bids have tripled since 2019. Doesn't look to be going down anytime soon.
In my limited days as a student apprentice working in a carpentry shop at OSU, we built quite a few walls out of aluminum studs. Hated them. They cut you. They would get super hot in the sun. Etc. Now, these aren’t load bearing walls by any means. During that same time, my step dad and I drove past a house that was built with metal studs. We watched it go up from slab to roof. It was pretty cool.
I had a horrible time finding a contractor to install a sliding door in my master bedroom.
Once I found one, still had to wait a while and then deal with delays in scheduling sub-contractors.
The residential home construction biz right now is crazy busy.
I have a friend who is retiring and moving out of state. He is looks to build and a builder he talked to will not quote a final price on the build due to lumber prices.
Yep I understand. I had some projects scheduled with a friend who was a re modeler. Ok I was patient and waited, the day before he was to start, he had a major heart attack and had to get out of the business. Well 2 plus years I've been waiting on someone else to do the projects plus a detached 2 car garage. Still waiting and should me next on his list. No idea of the costs due to the lumber/material prices and sure hope I can still afford to do the work.
The fence installer told me he bought a few semi loads of lumber a few months ago and is installing at that price but when he has to buy more the price at todays cost would almost double. Steel fence posts are also about twice what they were last year.
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