On the Move: Why Young Adults Today Are More Mobile Than Previous Generations
Untethered from family and enticed by new job opportunities, young adults are more mobile today than they have been in the nearly 60 years for which data are available.
On the Move: Why Young Adults Today Are More Mobile Than Previous Generations
Untethered from family and enticed by new job opportunities, young adults are more mobile today than they have been in the nearly 60 years for which data are available.
14 Million Millennials Still Live With Mom
More than 14 million young adults nationwide -- or 21.9% of people ages 23 to 37 -- live with their mothers, up from 12.7% in 2000.
America’s Youngest Adults Have the Most Confidence in Real Estate
Survey data collected over the past two years shows the nation’s youngest residents are also the most bullish on real estate.
16 Favorite Facts From the Zillow Group Report on Consumer Housing Trends Report 2018
Just over half of buyers put down less than 20 percent on their purchase, 41 percent of sellers have at least one offer fall through, people of color are more likely to experience rent increases than white renters -- and other findings in the new report.
Why Millennials Are Struggling to Become Homeowners
Young, highly-educated millennials earn more than typical American workers, make up a growing share of the population in some of the nation’s fastest-growing and most-dynamic cities, and are disproportionately likely to work in well-paid tech jobs. And still, they're struggling to become homeowners. Why?
Today’s College Grads Earn More, and Still Live at Home
New college grads have flocked to West Coast tech hubs over the past decade-plus. But as those markets rapidly become less affordable, recent data hints at a changing tide – and suggests rising housing costs nationwide are putting a squeeze on grads’ ability to strike out on their own.
2018 Predictions: The Inventory Crisis Will Drive the Market
In most markets around the country, inventory of homes for sale has become so tight that housing is now a game of musical chairs: Nobody wants to stand up from the home they’re currently living in and list if for sale, for fear they won’t be able to find another home to buy.