Larger Homes are in Demand Now


Posted September 25, 2020 by jeany5

Due to the coronavirus pandemic larger homes are in demand. People are now buying larger homes.
 
Bigger isn't necessarily better, or is it? Well according to We Buy All Kinds of Houses- real estate investors from Boston-bigger is better in this case because larger homes are on demand even if they cost more than smaller homes. As soon as larger homes hit the market, they sell right away.

For the past several years, the trend among many luxury homebuyers in the U.S. has been clear: bigger isn’t necessarily better. Buyers who could easily have sprung for sprawling estates have instead opted for so-called “jewel box” mansions, comparatively small spaces with just a few bedrooms that can be customized to the hilt with cash the owners might otherwise have spent on extra bedrooms or acreage.

As with so many other aspects of day-to-day life, the coronavirus pandemic has turned all that around.“For the longest time, people have been trending toward smaller and more manageable, simplifying their lives,” said Dana Koch, a Corcoran agent based in Palm Beach, Florida. “Now it’s the opposite. I don’t have a single client right now who’s looking to downsize.”Preferences vary by price range and region, but buyers in every market are eyeing extra space. “I would say [buyers are looking at] a 20% to 30% increase in size, whether in the number of bedrooms or square footage,” said Stephanie Anton, who was until recently the president Luxury Portfolio International. [She was interviewed for this story before she announced on June 23 she was leaving her post]. “It’s a jump-up a category or two across the board.”Versions of this trend are playing out in markets all over the U.S., making it an opportune moment for sellers looking to unload extra acreage, and a time for interested buyers to move quickly. But even buyers looking to make the leap from 4,000 to 10,000 square feet prefer not to feel ostentatious.“I’ve noticed that buyers do not like to think of it as a ‘mansion,’” said Danny Hertzberg, an agent with the Jills Zeder Group in Miami Beach. “In the advertising, you’re seeing the term ‘large estate.’ They’re using different vocabulary because it still seems too big if you’re getting a mansion, but it’s not big enough if you’re getting the jewel box.”Larger properties are moving on the market—fast
Whatever the terminology, extra-large properties that might have languished on the market in recent years are seeing a sudden spike in interest, while owners who had previously considered downsizing are suddenly deciding to stay put.“We’re seeing a renewed interest in homes that were once considered high maintenance,” said Chip Murphy, regional vice president of Hunt Real Estate in upstate New York. “We have an 11,000-square-foot lakefront property that’s in the contract after sitting for two years. We received multiple offers [in the past month] without a price change of any sort.”In the Los Angeles area, luxury condos that had generated brisk business pre-pandemic are “kind of sitting, with not that many requests for showings,” said Beverly Hills-based agent Rochelle Maize. On the flip side, a Malibu estate once owned by actor Robert Conrad sold immediately after coming on the market at the end of May.“That was a $5.2 million property, and it sold in the first day,” Ms. Maize said. “Malibu usually takes longer.”Properties in New York’s Hamptons that had stalled on the market for years have now closed, said Compass agent Evan Kulman, and clients that were previously comfortable in 2,500 or 3,000 square feet are now looking to bump up to 4,500 or 5,000. The same effect can be seen in other vacation home markets, as well. “I got a text from one of our brokers in Vail, Colorado saying, ‘The world has gone mad and we’re selling large properties,’” Ms. Anton said. “Specialty spaces [such as gyms and home offices] had already been an interest, but now they seem to have really emerged with a vengeance, and that’s driving square footage.”Buyers prioritize private spaces for the whole family
Amenities that have been discussed since families first started sheltering in place—home gyms, multiple home offices, media rooms, and at-home “classrooms” for the kids—are now influencing buying trends and the drive toward larger footprints. Now that buyers are looking at the long haul of multiple generations working, studying, exercising, and living under one roof, demands for space have expanded accordingly.“

According to We Buy All Kind of Houses, real estate investment group from Boston, larger homes is in demand especially since interest rates are lower and larger homes are sold as soon as they are put on the market People are working from home and need an office and children need room to study in. Since people are staying home now due to the coronavirus pandemic, they also want a gym or exercise room in their home and some want an indoor swimming pool. For more info go to: webuyallkindsofhouses.com.

The definition of home has changed over the past few months, and space is a key component of this,” Mr. Kulman said. Homes “have to be larger because of what’s happened in the world. They need to include one or two offices, a kids’ playroom, plus an area where they can study and do homeschooling. Many clients are feeling like they need more space than what they thought they needed in the past.”
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Last Updated September 25, 2020