My old apartment’s rent went up $150 every single year until I was eventually forced out it. No renovations, no improvements, just multiple rent spikes.
Only thing that didn’t go up was my pay
i know that s*** was enraging
My 2br has gone from 950 to 1100 to 1750 from 2019 until now.
Landlord is talking about another increase to 2250 next year, I’m legit being priced out. At 950 I lived good, at 1100 I was comfortable, now at 1750 me and the wife are both doing gigs after work and on weekends to live. We will both need two full time jobs when they raise it to 2250.
this is a f***ing horror show
My 2br has gone from 950 to 1100 to 1750 from 2019 until now.
Landlord is talking about another increase to 2250 next year, I’m legit being priced out. At 950 I lived good, at 1100 I was comfortable, now at 1750 me and the wife are both doing gigs after work and on weekends to live. We will both need two full time jobs when they raise it to 2250.
@Synopsis u tryna link w me and run up on this landlord
i mean if there's a mass influx of people coming to new areas with cheap rent + people going back to work to be employed, this would make sense. I didn't read the article tho
I’m just worried about buying a house with the inflated prices rn and then having my value plummet overnight, but it’s something I’m considering
well interest rates are low, so that's the plus
Yeah no s***, it’s because of blackrock buying up all of the real estate at an insanely inflated rate far above the market norm. It’s not just messing up the rent/housing market, it’s causing tons of commodities to skyrocket because relative index pricing is largely tied to real estate. Blackrock May single handedly be accelerating destabilization in the US
And they're doing it backed by the federal reserve
My 2br has gone from 950 to 1100 to 1750 from 2019 until now.
Landlord is talking about another increase to 2250 next year, I’m legit being priced out. At 950 I lived good, at 1100 I was comfortable, now at 1750 me and the wife are both doing gigs after work and on weekends to live. We will both need two full time jobs when they raise it to 2250.
this literally seems impossible
My 2br has gone from 950 to 1100 to 1750 from 2019 until now.
Landlord is talking about another increase to 2250 next year, I’m legit being priced out. At 950 I lived good, at 1100 I was comfortable, now at 1750 me and the wife are both doing gigs after work and on weekends to live. We will both need two full time jobs when they raise it to 2250.
2250?!?!?!
My 2br has gone from 950 to 1100 to 1750 from 2019 until now.
Landlord is talking about another increase to 2250 next year, I’m legit being priced out. At 950 I lived good, at 1100 I was comfortable, now at 1750 me and the wife are both doing gigs after work and on weekends to live. We will both need two full time jobs when they raise it to 2250.
that's crazy. not even sure doubling rent in 2 years is legal. what's the justification
I’m just worried about buying a house with the inflated prices rn and then having my value plummet overnight, but it’s something I’m considering
i feel you but if you gonna be there like 7-10 years you should be fine
Would it be a good idea to re-up for 2 years instead of 1.
I can't afford it if they jack up my rent much more. But I was thinking of leaving next year if I get a job in a major city
I feel like buying land and throwing one of those prefab houses on it will be the wave soon. This is what i wanna do.
I feel like buying land and throwing one of those prefab houses on it will be the wave soon. This is what i wanna do.
This is the wave bro. Do it asap. Your biggest expense will be water install. The permit cost is alot, don't be discouraged as there are grants for home builders. Especially during Covid. If you're looking at going that route, learn about water mitigation and alternatives.
Base your design off of the needs of the land and your external needs. Want a mini farm, solar, water well, pool etc. Think of the principles first and then find your design.
Building is hella fun lol
This is the wave bro. Do it asap. Your biggest expense will be water install. The permit cost is alot, don't be discouraged as there are grants for home builders. Especially during Covid. If you're looking at going that route, learn about water mitigation and alternatives.
Base your design off of the needs of the land and your external needs. Want a mini farm, solar, water well, pool etc. Think of the principles first and then find your design.
Building is hella fun lol
Imma def look into it my moms doing it and shes getting so much f***ing land im jealous