TOP

Pending Sales of Raleigh Real Estate vs Inventory Levels [Infographic]

Raleigh Real Estate saw a spike in March 2011 for Pending Sales. The graph shows the sales declined but inventory continued to climb. Sales this fall season have fallen off.

Our prediction for December is still sluggish sales with sellers withdrawing their homes from the market til the Spring Market arrives.

We also predict February through June 2012 sales will be robust and strong with housing prices increasing.

If you would like to get a free analysis of home sales in your subdivision, contact a HomeTowne Realtor.

Read More
TOP

Forbes Rates the Raleigh Area Top on Their Charts

Forbes Ranks Raleigh Real Estate Strong

Forbes has recently written several articles about Raleigh North Carolina.

 
* Raleigh is the #1 Best Places for Business and Careers
* Raleigh-Cary area is #3 Cleanest Metropolitan area and has better water.
* Raleigh is #1 on the annual list of Most Wired Cities.
* Raleigh is #1 fastest growing metro area

Forbes is a financial magazine that rates 100 top metropolitan areas on different criteria.  Raleigh continually tops the charts because of its affordability, an educated work force, and technology.

Raleigh offers low business costs (18% below the national average) and a highly educated work force (42% have a college degree).  Job seekers migration to the Raleigh area is the second highest in the U.S. over the past 5 years.

Raleigh has a broadband penetration of 71%.  Residents have ready access to high-speed Internet inside and outside the home.

The presence of tech companies like Cisco Systems, Inc., IBM Corp., Lenovo, and Red Hat, Inc., as well as area universities, create “fertile ground” for high broadband demand and usage.  Several mobile providers offer 4G mobile broadband networks around the Raleigh area.

“We’re very lucky to be at the epicenter of a lot of market strengths for these different companies,” says Brooks Raiford, head of the North Carolina Technology Association.

Despite the economic downturn, Raleigh grew by more than 4% in 2010, making it the nation’s fastest growing metro area.  It is the third straight year on top of the Forbes annual list of Best Places for Business and Careers. 

Businesses are also supported by strong local Chambers of Commerce including the Greater Raleigh Chamber of Commerce, part of who’s job is to bring in new business to the area.  A strong selling point is the excellent universities in close proximity. 

Affordable real estate and a growing jobs forecast put Raleigh solidly among the metropolitan areas that offer the most “bang for your buck,” according to Forbes Magazine.

According to Moody’s Economy.com, Raleigh is projected to have a gain of 1.4% in employment which would be the 15th best in the country.

Overall, Raleigh is holding up better than any other place in North Carolina and companies are still relocating to the area.

Read More
TOP

May 2011 Market Update for the Raleigh Real Estate Market

Raleigh Real Estate Market Update

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) reports that the homeownership rate has shifted from 69% to 66.5% in 2011. With all the recent market upheaval, many homeowners are being forced to either become renters or landlords.

Homeownership means you can paint your bedroom any color you want without asking permission. If you aren’t a homeowner already, the affordability index is up 4.3% over last May 2010 and +5% year to date.

New Listings in the Triangle decreased 7.7% to 3,475. Pending Sales were up 21.0% to 1,997 over last May 2010. Inventory levels shrank 10.2% to 18,008 but there are still plenty of great choices out there for homebuyers.

Prices were more or less stable. The Median Sales Price increased 1.8% to $189,000. Days on Market (an indication of how long it takes to sell) increased 26.4% to 126 days. The rate of inventory absorption slowed as Months Supply of Inventory was up 19.9% to 11.9 months. This means it takes longer to sell a house than it did in 2010. Homeowners are receiving contracts 91.9% below their original listing price but the Average Sales Price is steady at $220,054 – +0.1% year to day 2011.

Nationally, the interest rate dropped to 4.88% on a 30-year fixed conventional while the unemployment rate snuck up to 9.1% in May. The economy added 54,000 jobs, which was far less than April and insufficient to curb unemployment.

As far as recovery goes, we’re seeing positive trends in our local market. Stronger job growth is needed to fuel housing demand and reinforce consumer confidence.

Raleigh Real Estate Market Update for May 2011 by Hometowne Realty

Raleigh Real Estate Market Update for May 2011 by Hometowne Realty

Read More
TOP

2011 Market Trends for Raleigh Real Estate

The Raleigh Chamber of Commerce provided an economic overview of North Carolina at their December 2010 meeting. It provided a great insight about what role North Carolina—and Raleigh Real Estate—will have in the future of our economy.

The some of the speakers were Dr. John Silva, Managing Director and Chief Economist for Wachovia/Wells Fargo and Dr. Matthew Martin, Senior Vice President.

Dr. Silva discussed heavily the subject of employment, mentioning specifically that our state should see the majority of new jobs, and the most high-paying positions, created in high tech, education and health care. However, he was quick to point out that we should not confuse income growth with job growth, primarily as it relates to older workers. Baby Boomers are losing jobs quickly and are unable to compete for the type of work available today. Thus, a greater economic strain will be put on those who end up supporting that generation.

Dr. Silva also housing starts will remain slow, as will the general rate of appreciation in residential real estate.

Dr. Martin envisions North Carolina growing at a faster rate than the national economy and that our fundamentals look solid. Real estate is also an issue for him, as he sees a slow recovery in residential, especially while the glut of shadow inventory remains. On the commercial side, Martin is seeing signs of positive absorption in some areas.

He also emphasized a troubling unemployment rate and that it doesn’t look likely that some industries will be able to re-staff because of complete departures from the industry after prolonged joblessness.

The markets are highly psychological, especially in the short-run. That is why you can never predict the future of the stock market and rates. If the market sees a Fed move such as lowering short-term rates or purchasing assets as inflationary, long-term rates can go up in reaction. Dr. Martin expects the Fed to keep rates at about the same levels throughout 2011. 

The fundamentals have not changed. There is no inflation. The economy is still very slow and will slow further temporarily because of the foreclosure crisis.

Nationally, consumer confidence and business spending are keys to whether the U.S. housing market will move into a virtuous or a vicious cycle in 2011, NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun told a packed audience at the Residential Economic Outlook Forum in New Orleans. After the downturn, the housing market has clawed its way back to a point of near stability, Yun said, with the pace of new foreclosures easing, sales moving toward historically normal levels and prices on a national basis gaining modestly.

Yun predicts this positive trend to continue into 2011, with existing home sales reaching 5.5 million units, prices rising a modest 1 percent, and the U.S. gross domestic product increasing to about 2.5 percent.  But for the positive trend to continue, he added, businesses will have to start spending some of their cash to fuel job growth at a far greater pace than they’re doing now. Currently, businesses are adding jobs at a pace of about 100,000 a month. That needs to grow to about 400,000 a month for unemployment to start shrinking.

Locally the current supply of all Raleigh Real Estate is 12 months based upon closings in November, as compared to seven months in November 2009.

The Triangle Multiple Listing Service announced that the average sales price for a home re-sale in November for Durham, Johnston, Orange and Wake counties was $235,800, an increase of 12 percent over the same period 12 months earlier. While the current average sales prices are up 14 percent from November 2009, housing affordability is at an all-time high with the combination of prices and interest rates which continue at record lows.

Barry Woodard, broker/owner of HomeTowne Realty, Clayton North Carolina, says, “This is THE BEST TIME TO BUY! We will not see this quality of affordable housing for a long, long time.”

The bottom was reached in early 2010 and we stayed flat up until the fall 2010. The market is showing very positive signs for this Spring and each month should bring better sales into 2011 and beyond.

Read More
TOP

State of 2011 Raleigh Real Estate

Raleigh Real Estate

Raleigh Real Estate

2011 will bring a fresh breath of excitement again into Raleigh Real Estate.  The past is behind us and the future is looking brighter than ever.

Many realtors and Raleigh Real Estate companies have left the business and several have persevered.  Those will be the winners of the upswing in our marketplace moving forward.

HomeTowne Realty, Clayton North Carolina, has been very aggressive over the past 3 years in staking a claim in the Triangle Market and beyond.  We have taken an approach to move forward and expand our reach by targeting the Best Agents who want a better platform to succeed.

We are, in fact, the number 1 company in our market footprint . Our agents on average sell over 33% of every home sold. This year looks to be much better from a selling standpoint.

The Triangle Multiple Listing Service announced that the average sales price for a home re-sale in November for Durham, Johnston, Orange and Wake counties was $235,800, an increase of 12 percent over the same period 12 months earlier. While the current average sales prices are up 14 percent from November 2009, housing affordability is at an all-time high with the combination of prices and interest rates which continue at record lows.

While mortgage rates are trending a little higher, they are still very low compared to the past.

Fewer homes to compete with and less time on market all point to a better mix of supply and demand.  Foreclosure homes are typically trending less of an impact on pricing due to the absorption of this inventory plus fewer are coming on the market than in the past.

New Homes in Triangle Area are moving forward at a good pace and low inventory is making Days on Market (DOM) decrease as well. Prices are still very low and Builders are building on a thinner margin than in years past.

This is THE BEST TIME TO BUY! We will not see this quality of affordable housing for a long, long time.

The bottom was reached in early 2010 and we stayed flat up until the fall 2010. The market is showing very positive signs for this Spring and each month should bring better sales into 2011 and beyond.

Read More
TOP

Raleigh Real Estate Improving

Consumer confidence and business spending are key to whether the U.S. housing market will move into a virtuous or a vicious cycle in 2011, NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun told a packed audience at the Residential Economic Outlook Forum in New Orleans.

After the downturn, the Raleigh Real Estate housing market has clawed its way back to a point of near stability, Yun said, with the pace of new foreclosures easing, sales moving toward historically normal levels and prices on a national basis gaining modestly. At the same time, affordability remains strong. He said all of the price excesses from the housing bubble have been squeezed out. The broader economy is also showing positive signs, with businesses enjoying strong profits, sitting on huge cash reserves, and even adding jobs.

Yun predicts this positive trend to continue into 2011, with existing home sales reaching 5.5 million units, prices rising a modest 1 percent, and the U.S. gross domestic product increasing to about 2.5 percent. “We are entering a virtuous cycle,” he said. But for the positive trend to continue, he added, businesses will have to start spending some of their cash to fuel job growth at a far greater pace than they’re doing now. Currently, businesses are adding jobs at a pace of about 100,000 a month. That needs to grow to about 400,000 a month for unemployment to start shrinking. Source: Realtor® Magazine

At a time when many Americans are wondering how — and when — the housing market will recover, some people not only are encouraging first-time buyers to jump in to the market, they’re also helping them come up with a down payment. Twenty-seven percent of first-time buyers who purchased a home between July 2009 and June 2010 received a gift from family or friends to help with the down payment, according to the National Association of Realtors’ annual Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers survey, released at NAR’s annual conference here. That’s up from 22% a year earlier, and is the highest percentage in the more than 20 years the survey has been conducted, said NAR spokesman Walter Molony. Source: MarketWatch

After three consecutive years of declining remodeling activity, a key indicator of future spending on new kitchens, remodeled baths and other home improvement projects is finally pointing upward. Substantive growth in remodeling spending seems likely next year, according to the Leading Indicator of Remodeling Activity, which is published quarterly by the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University. The model is calling for spending to pick-up to a double-digit pace through the first half of 2011. ‘Remodeling contractors are feeling much more positive about the outlook for home improvement projects,’ says economist Kermit Baker, director of the Remodeling Futures Program at the Joint Center. ‘Low financing costs and a wave of previously foreclosed homes coming back on the market and in need of renovation are expected to generate healthy growth over the next several quarters.’ Actually, remodeling spending has nowhere to go but up, if only because the slowdown in activity over the previous three years is well below its long-term trend, according to Eric Belsky, managing director of the Joint Center. ‘A recovering economy should stabilize house prices and consumer confidence levels, encouraging homeowners to reinvest in their homes and undertake deferred repairs and replacements,’ Belsky said. Source: NM News

Real estate agents said more parents are opting to buy their children a home in college towns rather than pay rent for an apartment or dormitory fees, according to a survey from Coldwell Banker Real Estate. Of the 425 real estate professionals questioned in markets home to major colleges or universities, 64% said they saw a significant number of ‘parent investors’ buying homes for their college-age children. College towns have maintained some activity despite the downturn in the economy. Nearly two-thirds of the real estate agents said a significant number of investors are buying homes near campus and renting them out. ‘Long-term investors take advantage of the steady stream of renters, including students, professors and university officials,’ Coldwell CEO Jim Gillespie said. ‘Parent investors buy homes for their child to live in while attending college. Roommates provide rental income, and the hope is that students care for the home and it appreciates over time.’ Source: HousingWire

Read More
TOP

Raleigh Real Estate Market Update for Third Quarter 2010

 Real Estate is definitely local and all about supply and demand. When homeowners can see where the market has been along with 6 key factors, they will have a better understanding of what to expect as we finish out 2010 and move on into the next year.

According to the Federal Reserve Bank President William Dudley, it is most likely the U.S. will see growth at “an even slower rate when the third-quarter [2010] real gross domestic product (GDP) figures are released at the end of this month. We have ongoing sluggishness in two key sectors that have led past recoveries: consumer spending and housing.”

Triangle MLS Statistics for Raleigh Real Estate

Triangle MLS September Market Statistics

The Triangle Multiple Listing Service, Inc. announced that the average sales price of homes located in Durham, Johnston, Orange and Wake counties was $239,400 during the third quarter of 2010. This was a 9 percent increase compared to third quarter 2009 sales.

Sales trends for September show a decrease over September 2009 and this is the continued impact resulting from the end of the federal home buyer’s tax credit program which expired in September. Closed sales for the entire region in September were down 24.9 percent as compared to 2009. The first half of this year showed sales had increased substantially over 2009, except for February. This was the positive impact the tax credit played in home sales. As a result, sales through September year-to-date remain ahead of the same period last year.

There are currently 13,791 active listings within the four main counties, an increase of 12 percent compared to inventory levels for this quarter last year. There are 2,589 new home listings, a decrease of 7 percent compared to third quarter 2009, and 11,202 re-sale listings, an increase of 17 percent compared to the same period 12 months ago.

Other figures for the quarter include 8,709 new listings entered into the system during the quarter, which represents a 9 percent decrease compared to new listings entered into the system during third quarter 2009.

The current supply of all housing within the four main counties is 11 months based upon closings this quarter, as compared to seven months for third quarter 2009.

Raleigh Real Estate Days on Market
Month of August

In order to be optimistic about the 2011 outlook on real estate re-sales, we need to watch several key factors:
1. local unemployment rate
2. inflation rate
3. mortgage industry lending practices
4. interest rate
5. new construction
6. foreclosures

Local Unemployment Rate

North Carolina Unemployment Stats

North Carolina Unemployment Stats for August 2010

Currently North Carolina’s unemployment rate as of August 2010 is 9.7%. This time last year our unemployment rate was 10.9%. February 2010 was our highest month of unemployment at 11.2%, since then it has slowly started to reduce.

Although the unemployment rate held steady, the number of those employed declined, indicating that some job seekers left the labor force, presumably because they were discouraged by dismal prospects for employment.

Employment stability and job growth are keys to a housing recovery and are needed to help boost the confidence of households that are considering buying a home.

Slow employment growth are forecasted for the remainder of the year as GDP continues to show some growth and businesses find that they can no longer depend on the productivity growth of their current workers to increase output.

Residential construction continues to hemorrhage jobs, albeit at a slower rate than a year ago. In July, 16,900 jobs were lost, down from 27,700 job cuts a year earlier and 81,700 in November 2008. The continued decline in residential construction employment is in line with slowing single-family housing starts, which have been down three months in a row, and July’s sharply falling housing completions as builders reduced their work pace to hold down expenses in the face of weak demand following the expiration of the home buyer tax credit.

Inflation

For the Federal Reserve to clamp down on inflation, they could raise the interest rates. The Fed would prefer to keep interest rates low to stimulate the economy until banks have had more time to recover.

Over the last 12 months, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 1.4 percent. The index for all items less food and energy increased 1.0 percent. Higher prices for used cars and trucks (12.5 percent) and medical care (4.0 percent) contributed to the increase.

Mortgage Industry Lending Practices

The Federal Reserve’s third quarter Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices reported some easing of credit standards for prime residential mortgages among large banks over the previous three months. This marks the first net easing in the survey in more than three years.

Large banks have eased their prime residential mortgage loan standards and terms, especially those banks affected by competitive pressures from other banks or from non-bank lenders. It has been reported that smaller lenders have tightened their lending standards on such loans.

The Fed’s third quarter survey is an indication that banks may be beginning to return to the more normal lending standards that prevailed in much of the 1990s and the first part of the 2000s.

Mortgage applications have generally been on the rise, with the four-week moving average for applications up in nine of the last 10 weeks. Mortgage purchase applications are also showing some improvement, with the four-week moving average up in three of the last four weeks. This increase in demand marks a reversal of the weakening of demand since last April.

Interest Rate

NAHB projects that mortgage rates will remain below 6% through 2010 and most of 2011. The low rate of inflation gives the Federal Reserve the room to maintain its expansionary monetary policy and to keep mortgage rates low.

The average rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages again decline by four basis points (.04%), finding fresh ground at 4.62%. FHA-backed loans are available at an average rate of 4.31%, but there isn’t much home-buying activity going on at the moment.

New Construction

As of October 20, 2010 there are 3,442 new construction homes for sale throughout the Triangle area.

New Homes for Sale
Month of August

Home builders have had little to be optimistic about. This was reflected in the August NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), which fell from an already low 14 to 13, its lowest level since a reading of 9 in March 2009. With little prospect of increased sales on the horizon, builders are reluctant to add to their inventory.

Single-family construction appears to be close to a bottom. Single-family building permits in July slipped slightly with a 1.2% decline. The South was flat with 215,000 single-family permits.

In a dramatic indication that demand is weak and builders have entered into a holding pattern, new single-family units completed fell a steep 27.5% in July, the largest monthly decline on record going back to 1968. The rate of new construction is so low that there is barely any net growth in the U.S. housing stock these days.

New home completion rate in June reflected the push to meet the settlement date deadline at the end of the month (since extended to September) for the now expired home buyer tax credit. Now needing to complete fewer homes to keep up with weaker contract demands, builders are slowing completions to hold down the costs of installing relatively expensive finishing touches.

One reason why so little housing is being built is that many existing homes stand vacant. We estimate that there are roughly 3 million vacant housing units more than usual. And more vacancies are added daily as the foreclosure process moves homes from families to mortgage lenders. This stock of vacant homes will shrink when fewer are foreclosed upon and more of these homes are sold or rented out.

Foreclosures

As of October 20, 2010 there are currently 471 foreclosures in the Triangle MLS.

In the year 2011 there are four more waves of adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs) whose interest rates are set to adjust upwards from their low teaser rates. They are the ten year ARMs from 2001, the seven year ARMs from 2004, the five year ARMs from 2006, and a few three year ARMs from 2008. This will be in addition to the four waves of arms that reset in the year 2010 and many other types of creative financing better known today as toxic mortgages. As these loans all go delinquent and sell as foreclosed homes it will continuously pull down the value of real estate no matter what.

80 percent of Alt-A Pay Option Arm homeowners make only the minimum payment. That is all they can afford (if they can even afford that). The time bomb is negative amortization or “deferred interest”, a situation in which a borrower is paying less interest than what is actually being charged for a mortgage loan. The unpaid interest is added to the loan’s principal. At some point, the loan must start to amortize over its remaining term. Typically, negatively amortizing loans have scheduled dates when the payments are recalculated, so that the loan will amortize over its remaining term. The time bomb goes off when the loan is re-set.

Fitch Ratings released a wide-ranging look at option ARMs over the next 36 months. The bottom line is that most outstanding Negative Amoritization Mortgages won’t get out of 2011 alive due to the loan re-setting. Fitch also estimated that the potential average payment increase on the re-set loans to be 63 percent, representing on average an additional $1,053 due each month.

Homeowners can contact their lender to try and renegotiate their mortgage terms to avoid problems when their adjustable rate loan re-sets. Unfortunately not all lenders will work with the borrowers. When a homeowner owes more than what their house is worth whether they are delinquent or not, they are choosing to walk away from the house and give the keys back to the bank.

There’s two ways homeowners are giving back their house. The first example, a homeowner who owes $250,000 or more on their house in a neighborhood where all the homes are now worth $200,000 or less purchases a similar or an even better home at the cheaper price, and then lets the bank foreclose on the one they owed $250,000. With good credit, they can purchase the cheaper house before becoming delinquent on their current house. While they live in the second house, they can re-establish their credit.

Second, if they don’t qualify for the mortgage to purchase the second home, they will find a place to rent, let their current house get foreclosed on, and after they rebuild credit in about two years or less, they will purchase a new house at the discounted price. Where renting had once been seen as throwing money out the window, it can now be viewed as a wash or even an investment, for example, $1000 a month in rent for two years comes to $24,000, however by swapping property, they may be able to save upwards of a $100,000 depending on how much prices decline in their area.

Is Consumer Sentiment Improving?

After dropping sharply in July, the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index improved a bit in August’s preliminary reading, rising from 67.8 to 69.6. Also, there was a modest rise in the percentage of consumers who believe that now is a good time to buy a house — from 75% to 76% — a return to the June number and its highest reading since March.

The most common reasons cited for favorable home buying conditions were low prices (63%) and low interest rates (44%).
If renters have worked on rebuilding their credit, they are in a good position to take advantage of lower home prices. However, renters will only take advantage of the market if they feel the economy will support their investment. This increase in buyers will help to unlock our grid-lock on the re-sale market.

Supply and Demand

With all this information about what has been happening in the Raleigh Real Estate market, we can make take an educated guess at how our market will respond in 2011.

Demand

Even with the economy advancing at a snail’s pace and consumer confidence rebounding hesitantly, most potential home buyers remain on the sidelines despite low interest rates and affordable house prices. Impediments to home sales include a weak job market and continued uncertainty regarding the future path of home prices and interest rates.

The decline in house values over the past couple of years has reduced the amount of equity that owners have in their homes, making it difficult for people to come up with the funds needed to “trade-up” and move into better homes.

Supply

Rising possible foreclosures coming onto the market, vacant homes, unsold new construction all effect the re-sale real estate market. Over the next year, you might see some legislation from the government to assist homeowners faceing foreclosure with ARM mortgages. The slow-down of new construction being built and vacant houses either being rented or sold at a discount will relieve our overabundance of inventory.

The good news

Real estate will once again become affordable, which is key to keeping the American dream from becoming the American nightmare it is today. It will be great to once again see people purchase homes that won’t emotionally or financially drain them and their families. People will again be able to afford homes that are large enough to accommodate the size of their families, save for their futures, and start putting money away for retirement again.

Read More
TOP

Raleigh NC Rated in Top 10 Best Places to Live

Raleigh NC Rated in Top 10 Best Places to Live
January 2010

For the twelfth year in a row, Relocate America named the Top 100 Best Places to Live to for 2009.   This year many top areas from previous years fall like the rest of the nation but interestingly enough the cities on this years list proved themselves worthy. They reviewed local economy, housing and other essential statistics important to making key real estate buying decisions.

Key data regarding education, employment, economy, crime, parks, recreation and housing are reviewed, rated & judged. Special consideration is taken on the Top 10 Cities as they are listed in a ranked order of America’s Top 10 Places to Live.
1. Tulsa, OK
2. Dallas / Fort Worth, TX
3. Pittsburgh, PA
4. Durham, NC
5. Raleigh, NC
6. Huntsville, AL
7. Houston, TX
8. Albuquerque, NM
9. Lexington, KY
10. Little Rock, AR

To read the entire article, http://top100.relocate-america.com/

Read More
TOP

Clayton NC Real Estate has The Best Schools in the Most Affordable Zip Codes

BusinessWeek worked with real estate portal Cyberhomes to find the 25 most affordable Zip Codes with the best public schools
By Prashant Gopal

The location of a home, as we all know, determines its value. Buyers consider proximity to jobs, public transportation, shops, parks, and entertainment when looking for a place to live.  But they’ll pay a premium—even if they have to work multiple jobs, pinch pennies, and endure long commutes—to find a home in a top-rated school district.

The best public schools are typically found in the priciest neighborhoods, as economist Sandra E. Black found more than a decade ago when she studied elementary school test scores in the affluent Boston suburbs. Black found that parents were willing to pay 2.1% more to live in a school zone where test scores were 5% higher. Studies by other researchers in other parts of the U.S. and the world have since confirmed the link between real estate values and school quality.

So, what’s a budget-conscious buyer to do? BusinessWeek worked with real estate portal Cyberhomes to find the 25 most affordable Zip Codes with the best public schools. The top-ranked places have relatively low home values compared with the closest metro area and at least three schools with excellent standardized test scores. We identified working-class towns such as Vandergrift, Pa., outside Pittsburgh, where the median home value in June was $65,600—half the metro area’s median price—and Irvine, Calif., an Orange County college town with excellent public schools and a median home price just over $500,000 (astronomical by western Pennsylvania standards but downright reasonable in California).

Long Commutes: Time Is Money
“We wanted to find places where—relative to the market—you could still find values,” says Sarah Max, a senior writer at Irvine-based Cyberhomes.

Among the top-ranked Zip Codes were Pearl River, N.Y., and Nanuet, N.Y., both in Rockland County, a leafy suburban area only about 10 miles from Manhattan’s border at its closest points. Residents move to Rockland for the parks, the tree-lined streets—and because they get the best schools for their money.

Rockland is considerably less expensive than nearby Westchester County, N.Y., and Bergen County, N.J. That’s largely because residents endure long and unpredictable commutes, says Pete Sambets, an associate broker at Joyce Realty in Pearl River. “You have to plan for a two-hour trip—it all depends on the traffic,” Sambets says. “That’s why the prices are where they are.”

California buyers can sometimes choose to forgo an ocean view to opt for inland property with a better school system. The college town of Irvine, which ranked No. 12 on our list, doesn’t have a beach, but it does have a renowned school system.

Involved Parents Count as Much as Schools
“There are definitely trade-offs people will make,” says Black, now a University of California at Los Angeles economics professor. “The hard thing is that places with better schools tend to be in wealthier neighborhoods. A place with an ocean view might also have better schools. It’s hard to say how much you’re paying for better schools and how much you’re paying for the views.”

It’s not just the beauty of a location that drives home prices. Marcus A. Winters, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and an economist who focuses on education policy, says parents in wealthier neighborhoods tend to play a key role in pushing up test scores. They are often well-educated and want the same for their kids. They get involved in the schools and hold teachers and principals accountable. Students likely also benefit from being with peers with similar educational goals. And school choice can create competition and improve performance, he adds.
What remains unclear is whether people pay more to be in pricey neighborhoods because of the excellent schools or to live among the types of people who are attracted to good schools. Home buyers without children might also consider moving to neighborhoods with good schools for many reasons. It will cost them, but it could make financial sense because homes near good schools are always in demand. On the other hand, investors might consider buying in a lower-quality school district and then working to improve the schools and, as a result, improve property values, Winters says.

The Most Bang for Your Buck
Of course, there’s more to school quality than test scores. Not all parents and students want the same things from their schools. Families look for extracurricular activities or top sports programs. But perceptions matter, especially in academics.

A decade ago, Florida began giving letter grades to schools based on standardized test scores, with “A” being the best and “F” the worst. David Figlio, now a professor of education, social policy, and economics at Northwestern University, studied Gainesville (Fla.)-area home prices in 199 subdivisions and 20 elementary school zones before and after the state School Accountability System went into effect in 1999. He discovered that an A school was worth about $10,000 to a home’s value, on average—about 8%—more than a B school.

If you’re looking for a bargain, Figlio suggests finding a B school that just missed the top grade. That way a buyer could pay less for a home and still send their children to high-performing schools. And if the school improves just a touch the next year, a family could see some welcome home appreciation.

“If a school barely missed getting an A, you might be getting the biggest bang for your buck,” Figlio says.

Read More
TOP

How Raleigh NC Home Prices Compare to Major US Cities

Exploring how far your real estate dollar will stretch in various American housing markets
by Luke Mullins

In the more than three years since the housing bubble popped, American real estate prices have declined at a historic clip. The national median price of an existing home dropped to $177,700 in August. That’s 21 percent below the level in August 2006, when the median home price was $225,000. But just as the housing crash has hit various parts of the country with unequal force, $177,700 will buy you a much different house in one real estate market than it will in the next. To get a sense of how far your real estate dollar will stretch in different parts of the country today, here is a look at homes listed in the $177,700 range in 10 distinct U.S. cities. The listings were provided by real estate firm Trulia.com, a U.S. News partner.

#4 Raleigh North Carolina

Read More