It is attractive, at that price and cost of living, even I could have a house of my own if I had the job out there. But call it the Californian in me, I just don't see where the profit off your investment is to be made in it.
You being from California Skuzzy, you can verify for me with your opinion better than anyone. Are these new dream homes in Texas the same "little private pieces of suburbia" that the rest of this country has already been building and stockpiling for decades, located a convenient 30-90minutes outside the main central mass of our major cities/hubs? If they are, then I have a second honest question for you: what is Texas gonna do different in the next 20-30 years than what the entire nation just tried for the last 20-30?
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I am not from California. Born and raised in Texas. I have traveled a lot.
There is no stockpile of homes here. Never has been. The home I was referring to is probably available in every major city in the state, within minutes of anything in the city. Texas has never suffered a glut of available homes as people from all over the country continue to move here. People do move all over the state so there is usually a reasonable number of homes available in any given area.
The ones you are describing would be about 1/2 the price I stated and on a larger lot. If anyone feels the need to pay stupid prices, then you can always get a condo within walking distance of many downtown areas for two to three times the price of a home that is half a block further down the street. Home prices range from ten cents a square foot to ten dollars a square foot. Pick your spot.
When the housing bubble burst, the price of homes in Texas did not suffer too much and have recovered nicely. More likely due to the lower cost per square foot as compared to those states who really got hit hard.