Newer Post | home | Older Post |
The Buyer Pool For Starter Townhouses May Be Smaller For Now |
|
Starter townhouses (think two story, 15 - 25 year old) in the City of Harrisonburg used to sell for $150K-ish but have increased in price over the past five years to a range of somewhere between $200K and $240K. Why have prices escalated so quickly? Similar to much of the market, it's largely related to low interest rates... [1] With mortgage interest rates of 3% to 4%, the pool of potential home buyers expanded considerably... lots and lots of potential first time buyers were delighted to find that they qualified to purchase a townhouse. [2] Real estate investors were also happy to scoop up these types of townhouses as they were able to finance those purchases with exceptionally low mortgage interest rates as well. Certainly, the interest rate would be higher for an investment purchase than for an owner occupant, but an interest rate that is higher than "very very low" is perhaps "very low" so plenty of investors were purchasing these properties as well. But now, mortgage interest rates are a bit higher... OK... twice as high. The current average 30 year fixed mortgage interest rate is 6.95%. As such, and as shown on the "not at all based on real numbers or data" graph above... [1] Would be home buyers who could only qualify to buy with a mortgage interest rate of 3% - 4% clearly do not quality any longer and thus are not buying. [2] Investor buyers who were delighted to buy when interest rates were quite low are also likely not buying right now. That just leaves owner occupant home buyers who still qualify with 6.5% to 7.5% mortgage interest rates. What does this actually mean for this segment of our local housing market? [1] There will likely be fewer buyers coming to see your townhouse if you are selling a starter townhouse in the City of Harrisonburg. [2] There will likely be fewer offers on said townhouse, and less competition from other buyers if you are trying to buy such a townhouse. [3] We might see these townhouses take a bit longer to sell. Maybe? [4] Maybe the price of these townhouses won't climb quite as quickly over the next year or two. Maybe? These are my observations about this segment of our local housing market, very unscientifically graphed above. Let me know if you have other observations, thoughts or questions about the market for this type of property moving forward into 2023. Recent Articles:
| |
Newer Post | home | Older Post |
Scott Rogers
Funkhouser Real
Estate Group
540-578-0102
scott@funkhousergroup.com
Licensed in the
Commonwealth of Virginia
Home Search
Housing Market Report
Harrisonburg Townhouses
Walk Through This Home
Investment Properties
Harrisonburg Foreclosures
Property Transfers
New Listings