Baby Boomers and Millennials Are Competing for Homes, and Boomers Are Winning
SEATTLE, Oct. 14, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- A Zillow analysis reveals that the ongoing housing demand is influenced by demographics rather than a pandemic-driven surge. Millennials and baby boomers are the primary buyers, with median buyer age rising from 40 to 44 since 2009. Despite millennials being the largest group, older buyers are more active, contributing to competition. Baby boomers leverage home equity, giving them an edge. Home values rose 31.2% from 2009 to 2019, further intensifying the market. Recent trends show a decline in first-time homebuyers, down from 46% in 2018 to 37% in 2021.
- Increasing millennial homebuying rates indicate strong market demand.
- Overall home values have appreciated significantly, benefiting current homeowners.
- Millennials face intense competition from older generations for homes.
- The share of first-time homebuyers has decreased from 46% in 2018 to 37% in 2021.
SEATTLE, Oct. 14, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- The past year's frenzied housing demand likely has more to do with the demographic makeup of America than a onetime, pandemic-driven boom, a new Zillow® analysis of the age, sex, race and income of home buyers over a decade reveals. Millennials and baby boomers — two of the biggest generations in U.S. history — are in the market for homes in a big way.
With an aging population helped by an improving economy, individuals of every age group over 30 were buyers at higher rates in 2019 than those same age groups in 2009.i Still, a major construction slowdown after the Great Recession contributed to a lower rate of American households forming in the years since that time; there simply have not been enough homes for everyone who wanted to move out on their own. That illustrates the size of the gap that still needs filling and the reason for increasing competition among members of these two large generations.
"Even before the pandemic, the largest-ever generation entering their 30s and the hangover from more than a decade of underbuilding were on a collision course set to define the U.S. housing market," said Jeff Tucker, senior economist at Zillow. "The pandemic supercharged demand for housing, bringing the shortage into relief sooner than we expected, as millennials sought bigger homes with Zoom rooms, and older Americans accelerated retirement plans, spurring moving decisions."
Even as millennials are the biggest players in the U.S. housing market, buyers are trending older. The median age of a recent buyer — somebody who bought a home in the past year — was 44 in 2019, up from 40 in 2009. That's largely because baby boomers, who make up a big share of the population, are also more active in the housing market than those their age ten years ago. The share of recent buyers who are 60 years and older grew
This means that millennials, already grappling with skyrocketing housing costs from pre-pandemic housing trends and student debt that make saving for a down payment a steep hill to climb, also generally have more competition from their parents' and grandparents' generations than their predecessors did. That dynamic is likely one reason the share of buyers who were buying their first home has trended down from
More than half of homes sold this July went for above their list price, usually meaning the buyer expected the home to receive multiple offers. U.S. home values grew
"There are many hurdles millennials must overcome when buying homes of their own, one of them being fierce competition from the next-most-populous generation: baby boomers," Tucker said. "Whether downsizing or moving to a new town, baby boomers being more active means competition that previous generations did not have when buying their first home. And older buyers have the advantage of a lifetime's worth of savings and home equity to leverage in a competitive offer."
In 2019, many of the same forces driving moves during the pandemic were already in place; buyers were seeking affordability, and markets in the Sun Belt were drawing new buyers. Jacksonville had the highest share of households that had bought their home within the past year (
The analysis also shows how younger buyers are seeing more luck in less expensive areas, perhaps after being priced out of metros where homes are more expensive. Home buyers ages 60 and older made up a bigger share in sunny retirement destinations, such as Miami (
Previous Zillow research has shown that increased flexible work options have the potential to make homeownership an affordable possibility for millions of U.S. renters — who tend to be younger — and may especially benefit Black renters looking to buy their first home.
About Zillow Group
Zillow Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: Z and ZG) is reimagining real estate to make it easier to unlock life's next chapter.
As the most-visited real estate website in the United States, Zillow® and its affiliates offer customers an on-demand experience for selling, buying, renting or financing with transparency and nearly seamless end-to-end service. Zillow Offers® buys and sells homes directly in dozens of markets across the country, allowing sellers control over their timeline. Zillow Home Loans™, our affiliate lender, provides our customers with an easy option to get pre-approved and secure financing for their next home purchase. Zillow recently launched Zillow Homes, Inc., a licensed brokerage entity, to streamline Zillow Offers transactions.
Zillow Group's brands, affiliates and subsidiaries include Zillow®; Zillow Offers®; Zillow Premier Agent®; Zillow Home Loans™; Zillow Closing Services™; Zillow Homes, Inc.; Trulia®; Out East®; StreetEasy® and HotPads®. Zillow Home Loans, LLC is an Equal Housing Lender, NMLS #10287 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org).
i In 2019,
ii In 2019,
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SOURCE Zillow
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