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Here are North America's Most Expensive Housing Markets
Zero Hedge ^ | 03/13/2016 | Tyler Durden

Posted on 03/13/2016 3:57:47 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

Courtesy of Point2Homes

When the average home price in San Francisco went over the $1 million threshold in the first half of 2015, it was pretty obvious for most people that the Bay city secured the top position as the most expensive housing market in the U.S. This is exactly what happened. According to records released at the end of last year, San Francisco is the superstar housing market not only in the U.S., but for the entire North America as well.

But what may really surprise some people when looking at the top 15 list of the most expensive housing markets in North America is seeing Vancouver — the third most expensive city in the world — down in the 6th position, behind a less expected entry … Brooklyn, N.Y.! The reason for this is the same one which pushed Toronto out of the top 10 list and to #11: a weaker Canadian dollar. And guess who comes right after Toronto? Well, it’s Queens, N.Y.

 

#1. San Francisco, CA

Median home sale price (Dec. 2015): $1,085,000 USD

With sky-high home prices becoming the norm in San Francisco, many are wondering how long people are going to be able to afford buying a home here, especially since the condo market is not significantly cheaper than the detached-home segment.

 

#2. Manhattan, NY

Median home sale price (Dec. 2015): $1,059,000 USD

According to real estate data powerhouse PropertyShark, at the end of 2015, the median home sale price in Manhattan went over $1 million for the first time. And if you take into account that in 3 Manhattan neighborhoods prices jumped over $3 million as well, then this news is expected.

 

#3. San Jose, CA

Median home sale price (Dec. 2015): $700,000 USD

The state of California has another strong representative in list of the top most expensive housing markets in North America. And not just on this continent. With $700,000 the median home sale price, San Jose also ranks very high on the list of most unaffordable cities in the world, according to Demographia’s housing index.

 

#4. Brooklyn, NY

Median home sale price (Dec. 2015): $620,000 USD

Said to be following in Manhattan’s footsteps, Brooklyn has seen home prices break all previous records in 2015. It’s a surprising entry into our list and its high median price reflects a peaking luxury market which has attracted a growing number of foreign investors.

 

#5. Los Angeles, CA

Median home sale price (Dec. 2015): $565,000 USD

In the second and third quarters of 2015, Los Angeles saw home prices soar to levels last seen before the onset of the financial crisis. The fourth quarter, however, remained flat, leaving real estate experts looking ahead to the warm months for sales to pick up again.

On the other hand, rentals in Los Angeles haven’t slowed down. They continue to climb all over town.

 

#6. Vancouver, B.C. (Canada)

Median home sale price (Dec. 2015): $549,783 USD / $760,900 CAD

The main culprit of Vancouver’s low position in our list is the Canadian dollar. The fact that it lost strength against the US dollar made the Canadian real estate properties a much more affordable asset for American home buyers. Now an average home in Vancouver (including condos) will cost Americans just a little over $500,000 USD, which is half of what they pay now for a home in San Francisco. However, the benchmark for a single-family home was, at the end of 2015, at record-levels — $1,226,300 CAD, which still means a jaw-breaking $911,240 USD.

 

#7. Seattle, WA

Median home sale price (Dec. 2015): $538,500

The tech boom Seattle has been seeing in the last years has taken its toll on home prices, which have been following a rising trend. Although the year-over-year growth is somewhere around 13%, real estate professionals expect the city to be the next Silicon Valley or New York in the next 5 years.

 

#8. Washington, D.C.

Median home sale price (Dec. 2015): $510,838 USD

Home prices grew exponentially in Washington D.C. especially between 2012 and 2014, when other cities were registering decreases. Although the pressure has eased a bit in certain markets, central neighborhoods continue to see prices sky-rocket.

 

#9. San Diego, CA

Median home sale price (Dec. 2015): $510,000 USD

Almost tieing with Washington D.C., San Diego is still more affordable than other counties in California, most notably Orange County and LA County. Home prices have been rising in the past years, leaving some experts wondering if the city hasn’t reached a bubble.

 

#10. Boston, MA

Median home sale price (Dec. 2015): $451,250 USD

Boston had several things to show off for 2015:  4 of its neighborhoods were included on the list of the hottest neighborhoods in the nation, plus the number of sales and the median home price continued to register increases compared to 2014.

 

#11. Toronto, ON (Canada)

Median home sale price (Dec. 2015): $443,064 USD/ $613,200 CAD

Despite its low position in our list this year, the Toronto housing market is still the second hottest in Canada, after Vancouver, and one of the most active markets in the world. The recent boom in condo development placed Toronto ahead of any other city in the world in terms of numbers of new recorded building permits.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: housing; realestate

1 posted on 03/13/2016 3:57:47 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Do the average salary in the cities support these prices?

Average property taxes?

This epic bubble will end with crushing losses


2 posted on 03/13/2016 4:00:53 PM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - they want to die for islam and we want to kill them)
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To: SeekAndFind

Wow, Brooklyn!

I was born there. I lived there until 1976.

A house in Bedford-Stuyvesant that belonged to my great-uncle was sold by my family in 1974 for $6000. It was sold late last year for $2.5 million.

What a turnaround.


3 posted on 03/13/2016 4:00:56 PM PDT by Jim Noble (Diseases desperate grown, are by desperate appliance relieved, or not at all)
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4 posted on 03/13/2016 4:01:03 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (Facing Trump nomination inevitability, folks are now openly trying to help Hillary destroy him.)
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To: Jim Noble

I’m sure you meant $60,000 in 1974, not $6,000. Right?

Woulda, shoulda, coulda...


5 posted on 03/13/2016 4:14:53 PM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: SeekAndFind

My guess is that these rankings correspond very closely to restrictive building codes/zoning regulations and liberal voters.

To put it less graciously: liberals keep the riffraff out of their neighborhoods by passing laws to make it very expensive to live where they live. At the same time they excoriate everyone else for being insensitive about the needs of the poor.


6 posted on 03/13/2016 4:17:37 PM PDT by Tom D.
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To: 2banana
"Do the average salary in the cities support these prices?"

I can't speak for an "average" salary in the Seattle area, but if you work for Amazon or Microsoft, you are likely doing VERY well.

Good luck being an average shlub who wants a house in Redmond, though.

I'm a physician living in the south suburbs.

I do OK, but I couldn't dream of living somewhere like Bellevue.

The houses you'd *want* to live in run around a million per.

I can't afford that.

Heck, I remember being in Kirkland and seeing a rickety, OLD waterfront house going for that.

It's been torn down now, and a beautiful home is there.

Probably worth TWO million.

Location, location, location.

7 posted on 03/13/2016 4:20:12 PM PDT by boop ("A Republic, if you can keep it."-Franklin, 1787. "We couldn't keep it"-America, 2016)
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To: SeekAndFind

Why did they treat NYC as three separate markets ?

Makes no sense.

.


8 posted on 03/13/2016 4:25:10 PM PDT by Mears
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To: 2banana
Do the average salary in the cities support these prices?

Most of the people whom I know in the Los Angeles area, have either roommates or room-renters in order to make ends meet.

I wouldn't be surprised to find that situation is common in many of these cities.

9 posted on 03/13/2016 4:25:15 PM PDT by ChicagahAl (Socialism is the political version of AIDS. No Cure. Always Fatal. Contagious If Unprotected.)
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To: SeekAndFind
My parents bought their Hermosa Beach, CA home in 1976 for $70,000. They could barely afford it at the time.

Mom, age 84, still lives there. Today, as a "teardown" her property would easily go for $2.4 million. Someone built a custom home over the teardown next door to her. It sold for $4.8M last year.

Needless to say, if it weren't for Proposition 13 capping her property taxes, she would have been forced to sell/move years ago.

10 posted on 03/13/2016 4:27:13 PM PDT by Dagnabitt (Islamic Immigration is Treason)
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To: SeekAndFind

Bogus, Honolulu does not even make the list, but Dallas does, with a median of $289K does? You cannot buy a shack in Honolulu for that. 1 bedroom condos go for way over that, houses are far above.


11 posted on 03/13/2016 4:39:31 PM PDT by doorgunner69
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

Bought my first house 50 miles north of LA in 1970. Paid $21K.


12 posted on 03/13/2016 4:40:21 PM PDT by umgud
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To: SeekAndFind

The USD is worth only $.02, so these $1 Million houses are really only going for $20,000. Went to the store today for a chuck roast to grind up for burger, $5.79 a pound. No inflation seen there at all, not with mayo at $3.79 a quart, lettuce for a measly bunch at $1.79, $1.00 for a bundle of green onions or a can of Campbells soup for $1.79.


13 posted on 03/13/2016 4:49:54 PM PDT by Glad2bnuts
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To: doorgunner69
Bogus, Honolulu does not even make the list, but Dallas does, with a median of $289K does? You cannot buy a shack in Honolulu for that. 1 bedroom condos go for way over that, houses are far above.

Hawaii is not part of North America.

14 posted on 03/13/2016 5:24:11 PM PDT by FreeReign
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To: FreeReign

Indeed, did not pick up on that in the title.


15 posted on 03/13/2016 6:04:50 PM PDT by doorgunner69
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

SIX THOUSAND DOLLARS.

If you were white, you needed armed guards to go near the place. My grandmother’s home over her father’s grocery store in Fort Greene Park was a crack house, now it’s condos over an upscale Italian restaurant.

Incredible, incredible change in Brooklyn.


16 posted on 03/13/2016 6:39:34 PM PDT by Jim Noble (Diseases desperate grown, are by desperate appliance relieved, or not at all)
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To: umgud

Wow...my first one was in Palo Alto for $100k in ‘78. A tiny shack and unaffordable as heck.


17 posted on 03/13/2016 8:46:29 PM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

Palmdale. Palo Alto was stiff even in those days.


18 posted on 03/13/2016 9:06:52 PM PDT by umgud
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To: 2banana
Do the average salary in the cities support these prices?

There's a reason why home prices are so high in San Francisco. The answer is availability of jobs. Not just that, but high paying jobs. There's been a building boom of tech buildings, cranes dot the landscape. Been going on the last couple decades, bringing in thousands of tech workers. Many of these people earn 6-figure salaries. We've seen home prices go up ten per cent a year over that last five years. Crazy. Homes that go up for sale quickly post sold signs, with some buyers paying cash. For million dollar homes. Me and my wife are currently remodeling her mom's home in SF. Her siblings have been bugging us to sell it (because they are greedy wanting to borrow against a future inheritance). We have stalled it, because the money is necessary for her mom's expenses in assisted living. Anyway, if we had sold five years earlier we would have been out a half-million in potential profits. It's gone up that much in five years.

19 posted on 03/13/2016 9:12:54 PM PDT by roadcat
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To: doorgunner69

The listing is for North America, which excludes Hawaii.


20 posted on 03/14/2016 6:36:21 AM PDT by octex
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