Buying With Help From The Rental Units
The Times dishes on the New York City real estate market’s dirty little secret that it’s being fueled in great part by the retirement-age parents of twenty- and thrity-somethings who wouldn’t otherwise have a shot in hell of owning even a studio apartment. When we bought our first apartment a 950-square-foot prewar one-bedroom in Manhattan for $160,000 in 1996, it was still possible for a 27-year-old and his fiancee to buy something on their own. Now, though, the idea of having socked away a downpayment of $150,000 or $200,000 (instead of $30,000 or $40,000) by the age of 30 is realistic only for those in a small handful of professions. Enter Mom and Dad. In Williamsburg (where Natasha Agrawal, bottom right, got hooked up with a $900,000 penthouse by her parents), one Douglas Elliman broker estimates that one quarter of the condos are being bought by parents or the trust funds they have set up. The twist, The Times notes, is that these hand-outs often come with some (creepy) strings attached, such as extorted promises not to let a boyfriend or girlfriend move in.
Buying With Help From Mom and Dad [NY Times]
Feb 15, 2012 | 11:04 AM