Trulia Survey Finds Millennial Buyers Face Tough Decisions When Entering The Housing Market

Latest findings show 35% of 20-36 year olds who plan to purchase will do so in the next 12 months

San Francisco, CA – May 10, 2018 (PRNewswire) Today Trulia®, a home and neighborhood site that helps homebuyers and renters discover a place they’ll love to live, released the findings from its Consumer Home Buying Survey which suggests that market conditions and financial obstacles could be forcing millennial homebuyers to consider home and neighborhood trade-offs in order to purchase a home. The survey, conducted online by The Harris Poll of more than 2,000 Americans aged 18 and older, found that 84% of millennials (ages 20-36) say they’d be willing to give up one or more home features to live in their ideal neighborhood, if they were looking for a new home. Meanwhile 89% would be willing to give up one or more neighborhood features to live in their ideal home.

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Millennial Buyers Under Pressure Thanks to Rising Prices and Down Payment Savings
Of the 86% of millennials planning to purchase a home, 35% plan to purchase in the next year. However, rising home prices and shrinking inventory has created an environment where compromises are needed to be made. As the largest prospective home buying generation, almost all (98%) of millennials planning to buy in the next year have encountered obstacles that are keeping them from buying at this time. Unsurprisingly, financial concerns rank at the top of the list, with rising home prices as the most common culprit, affecting 40% of this population and saving enough for a down payment coming in second at 31%.

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Generational Gap: Money Problems More Likely to Deter Millennial Buyers
Among those who ever planned to buy a home, millennials are the generation most likely to have had to put their home buying plans on hold at 90%, compared to 77% of Gen Xers (ages 37-53) and only 61% of baby boomers (ages 54-73). A look at generational differences in home buying obstacles sheds some light on difficulties that are uniquely skewed toward millennials including job instability (17%) and inability to pay off student debt (15%). Significantly less baby boomers have struggled with some of the biggest obstacles faced by millennials and Gen Xers – in fact, 39% have never had to put their home buying plans on hold.

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Home Search Tradeoffs: Garages and Block Parties Top the List of Features to Forgo for Millennials
Perhaps due to tight budgets and fewer inventory, millennials are more willing than any other generation to consider trade-offs in their home and neighborhood. With 84% of millennials willing to give up a home feature to live in their ideal neighborhood and 89% willing to give up a neighborhood feature for their ideal home, older generations are less likely to be willing to compromise. About a third, 35%, of boomers and 22% of Gen Xers say they wouldn’t compromise on any home features for their ideal neighborhood while looking for a home, and 19% of boomers wouldn’t give up any neighborhood features for their ideal home. Garages are the number one feature to go when it comes to a new home feature for millennials, with 34% willing to give it up – compared to 22% of Gen Xers and 15% of baby boomers.

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Similar to home trade-offs, 89% of millennials are willing to consider neighborhood concessions when searching for their ideal home, with 24% willing to accept higher crime rates, while only 15% of Baby Boomers said the same. However, all three generations agreed that neighborhood activities, such as clubs and block parties, would be the first feature that would get the axe during their home search (35%, 36%, and 42%, respectively).

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Quotes from Trulia’s Senior Economist, Cheryl Young:

  • “For millennials, the dream of homeownership is alive and well, but with prices going up and inventory continuing to shrink, this new generation of buyers are facing more obstacles than any other demographic. With tight budgets and fewer choices on the market, most millennials are forced to make trade-offs and are more willing than other generations to give up home and neighborhood features in order to find their ideal home.”
  • “In markets where the economy and job growth are thriving, we may see some of these financial challenges start to dissipate as millennials mature into their careers. If anything, millennials can hold out hope that the encouraging housing starts we saw in 2017 can lead to some relief in the starter home segment.”

Methodology
This survey was conducted online within the United States by The Harris Poll on behalf of Trulia from April 10-12, 2018 among 2,026 U.S. adults ages 18 and older. This online survey is not based on a probability sample and therefore no estimate of theoretical sampling error can be calculated. For complete survey methodology, including weighting variables and subgroup sample sizes, please contact pr@trulia.com.

About Trulia
Trulia’s mission is to build a more neighborly world by helping you discover a place you’ll love to live. Homebuyers and renters use Trulia’s website and suite of mobile apps to get a deeper understanding of homes and neighborhoods across the U.S. through personalized recommendations, insights sourced straight from locals, and 34 different map overlays that offer details on commute, reported crime, schools, nearby businesses, and more. Founded in 2005, Trulia is based in San Francisco, and owned and operated by Zillow Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: Z and ZG). Trulia is a registered trademark of Trulia, LLC.

Media Contact:
Marcelo Vilela
pr@trulia.com
(415) 400-7228

Buyers Face Tough Spring Market As Move-In Ready Starter Homes Become Harder To Find, Pricier, Smaller, And Older

Ahead of spring house hunting season, housing inventory rose 3.3% nationally but the number of starter homes plummeted to its lowest level since 2012.

San Francisco, CA – March 21, 2018 (PRNewswire) Today Trulia®, a home and neighborhood site that helps homebuyers and renters discover a place they’ll love to live, released the findings from its quarterly Trulia Inventory and Price Watch. This quarter’s report found that national housing inventory rose 3.3% year-over-year, driven almost entirely by a 13.3% increase in premium homes. This is the first time that inventory has hit positive territory during the first quarter since 2015. However, starter home inventory plummeted, hitting its lowest level in at least six years, and amid a 9.6% year-over-year increase in median list price.

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Trulia’s Inventory and Price Watch found that first-time buyers will face a tough spring market in 2018. Not only will buyers face fierce competition in a tighter and pricier housing market, the quality of available starter homes appears to have diminished.

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Starter Homes Becoming Non-Starter for Many Buyers
Not only will first-time buyers face fierce competition in a tighter and pricier housing market, the quality of available starter homes appears to have diminished. Today, starter homes are less likely to be move-in ready with fixer-uppers making up 11.2% of the market, up from 10.3% in 2012. Most notably, Camden, N.J, Philadelphia, and Oklahoma City saw their share of fixer-uppers among starter homes rise the most. Moreover, starter homes nationally are nine years older on average and about 2% smaller in terms of square footage, shrinking to 1,187 square feet from 1,211 square feet six years ago.

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Starter Homes Completely Out of Reach in San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles, and Orange County
The ongoing inventory crunch continues to impact affordability across the country. Nationally, starter-home buyers now need to spend at least 41.2% of their income to buy a typical starter home – significantly more than the recommended amount. This 4.2 percentage point increase is the largest year-over-year rise on record. Regionally, California is home to the most unaffordable markets in the country. In fact, starter-home buyers in San Francisco, San Jose, Calif., and Los Angeles would need to spend more than 100% of their income to buy the median-priced starter home in those markets.

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Quotes from Trulia’s Senior Economist Cheryl Young:

  • “First-time home buyers face a perfect storm this spring. Affordable, move-in ready starter homes have become harder to find amid rising home prices and mortgage rates. While new home construction hit a 10-year high in 2017, these units have not translated into starter home inventory just yet.”
  • “If you’re looking to buy a fixer upper, proceed with caution. It may seem like a reasonable starter home but may be a trade-up home in disguise. In tight markets where bidding wars are common, sellers have little incentive to upgrade their properties before listing them. First-time homebuyers should keep that in mind as they assess the hidden costs that comes with fixing up a home, especially if it’s an older home.”

Methodology
The Trulia Inventory and Price Watch offers buyers and sellers deeper insight into the change in supply and affordability of homes, within three different segments of the market: starter homes, trade-up homes, and premium homes. Based on the for-sale homes listed on Trulia, this report calculates housing inventory within each segment nationally and in the 100 largest U.S. metros, from Jan. 1 to March 1, 2018. In the deeper analysis of starter homes, metro level characteristics such as square footage and age of home are reported as medians while national metrics are weighted averages of the 100 largest metropolitan areas. Fixer-uppers were identified using property listings descriptions that used terms such as “fixer,” “as-is,” “needs work,” “deferred maintenance” and “TLC.” For the full report and methodology, see here.

About Trulia
Trulia’s mission is to build a more neighborly world by helping you discover a place you’ll love to live. Homebuyers and renters use Trulia’s website and suite of mobile apps to get a deeper understanding of homes and neighborhoods across the U.S. through personalized recommendations, insights sourced straight from locals, and 34 different map overlays that offer details on commute, reported crime, schools, nearby businesses, and more. Founded in 2005, Trulia is based in San Francisco, and owned and operated by Zillow Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: Z and ZG). Trulia is a registered trademark of Trulia, LLC.

Media Contact:
Daisy Kong
pr@trulia.com
(415) 400-7391

Trulia Unveils New Mission To Help Buyers And Renters Discover Homes And Neighborhoods They’ll Love

Bringing its mission to life, Trulia launches new product feature, What Locals Say, and national advertising campaign

San Francisco, CA – March 19, 2018 (PRNewswire) Trulia®, a home and neighborhood site for homebuyers and renters, today launched a new product feature, What Locals Say, and a national advertising campaign inspired by Trulia’s new mission: “Build a more neighborly world by helping you discover a place you’ll love to live.”

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Trulia’s mission aims to solve an unmet need for rich neighborhood insights — everything from a home’s proximity to nearby parks and restaurants to getting a feel for the surrounding community. Through extensive consumer research conducted in 2017, Trulia found that 85% of homebuyers who plan to buy within 18 months say that the neighborhood is equally or more important than the house. In fact, 76% of those same buyers said one of their drivers for moving was a neighborhood- or life stage-related reason, such as wanting a different lifestyle because of a baby or marriage, a shorter commute, or finding the right school for their children.

“More than 10 years ago, Trulia revolutionized the way people found homes by making real estate listings searchable online. Fast forward to 2018, house hunters now expect to see listings on the Internet,” said Tim Correia, senior vice president and general manager of Trulia. “We understand that neighborhoods matter. Our new mission will guide Trulia to deliver even more innovative products to help buyers and renters discover and understand what it’s really like to live in a home and neighborhood before they move in, much like a trusted friend or neighbor.”

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Delivering Neighborhood Insights Straight From Locals
What Locals Say provides house hunters with neighborhood insights straight from locals. This new feature is now available on Trulia’s for-sale and rental listings to help shed light on information that is not easily found elsewhere.

At launch, What Locals Say already features more than seven million answered polls and written reviews by locals to give an authentic picture of what it’s like to live in a neighborhood. While reviews highlight what locals love about their neighborhood, the polls reveal whether most locals talk to their neighbors, see people walking their dogs around the block, decorate their homes for the holidays, can find easy parking, take care of their yards, and more. On average, locals are submitting about 100,000 poll responses and reviews a day, which will only continue to expand the feature’s reach to more neighborhoods across the country.

New Ads Show How Trulia Brings A Neighborhood To Life
Trulia’s national ad campaign, “Insiders,” illustrates how the brand delivers on its new mission. The campaign personifies Trulia through colorful, authentic, and entertaining neighborhood insiders — Paperboy Pete and Dog Walker Dana — who take viewers on a neighborhood tour of the world beyond driveways and mailboxes. The ads showcase Trulia’s 34 different map overlays that offer details on commute, reported crime, schools, and nearby businesses, and the new What Locals Say feature. In addition to the two ads (0:15 and 0:30 second formats) running across cable networks, the campaign also includes an additional spot built for digital video, as well as 0:06 second pre-roll videos.

“We met with people across the country as part of our research, and one truth rang clear: when people search for a home, they are also searching for a neighborhood that suits their lifestyle,” said Alissa Reiter, vice president of marketing at Trulia. “We want people to know Trulia as the trusted partner that will help them really understand a neighborhood’s community and culture.”

Trulia’s brand strategy and creative were developed in partnership with its agency of record, Venables Bell & Partners, a relationship that began last year. The ads were directed by Speck and Gordon with production company, Furlined. Trulia’s new TV ads can be found on its YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/trulia.

For more information, visit www.trulia.com/blog/tech/what-locals-say.

About Trulia
Trulia’s mission is to build a more neighborly world by helping you discover a place you’ll love to live. Homebuyers and renters use Trulia’s website and suite of mobile apps to get a deeper understanding of homes and neighborhoods across the U.S. through personalized recommendations, insights sourced straight from locals, and 34 different map overlays that offer details on commute, reported crime, schools, nearby businesses, and more. Founded in 2005, Trulia is based in San Francisco, and owned and operated by Zillow Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: Z and ZG). Trulia is a registered trademark of Trulia, LLC.

For further information:
Daisy Kong
pr@trulia.com
(415) 400-7391