The Dollars and Cents of Buying a Home
Most buyers – especially first-timers – rely on their agents for home financing advice.
Prospective Buyers: Results from the Zillow Consumer Housing Trends Report 2022
A global pandemic, historic economic change and an unprecedented shift in the housing market have been hallmarks of the past year. But while these large-scale changes have shifted the landscape and have the potential to reshape buyers’ preferences over the longer term, many behaviors and attitudes remain the same.
Buyers: Results from the Zillow Consumer Housing Trends Report 2022
A global pandemic, historic economic change and an unprecedented shift in the housing market have been hallmarks of the past year. But while these large-scale changes have shifted the landscape and have the potential to reshape buyers’ preferences over the longer term, many behaviors and attitudes remain the same.
Renters: Results from the Zillow Consumer Housing Trends Report 2022
The 2022 Consumer Housing Trends Report (CHTR) provides a snapshot of what housing consumers are thinking and doing in early-to-mid 2022. In this report, we take a deeper look at renters For the first time in recent years, CHTR includes both renters who have moved in the last year (the historical focus of the report), as well as tenured renters who have lived in their homes longer.
LGBTQ+ Renters Face More Challenges, Including Higher Up-Front Costs
LGBTQ+ renters comprise about one in eight of all renters and one in five of those that moved recently, according to new analyses of the 2022 Consumer Housing Trends Report (CHTR). These LGBTQ+ renters face disproportionate hurdles to finding housing, like higher costs in areas that protect them from housing discrimination and a higher frequency and likelihood of paying upfront costs like application fees and security deposits.
There is broad support to allow accessory dwelling units, duplexes and triplexes in residential neighborhoods, according to a new Zillow survey covering 26 U.S. metro areas, many of which are struggling with housing affordability.
Renters of Color Pay Higher Security Deposits, More Application Fees
Renters of color typically submit more applications — and pay more in application fees — before they secure a place to live than white renters do. Renters of color also typically pay a higher security deposit when they move in