Millennials led the 2020 housing boom, but it wasn't enough to catch up to boomers
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Despite fueling 2020's boom in the housing market, millennial homeowners are still lagging behind.
More millennials bought homes last year than any other generation, according to Apartment List's Homeownership report, as the pandemic accelerated a five-year trend in which millennial
Less than half (42%) of millennials are homeowners, per the report, compared to 48% of Gen Xers and 51% of baby boomers when they were the same age. While first-time home purchases increased from 31% to 33% in the past three years, the report said, the uptick doesn't come close to the 50%-plus first-time buys during the pre-Great Recession "homeownership boom."
The pandemic will likely continue to exacerbate this generational chasm, the report states, partly because it's caused some millennials to delay homeownership or give up on homeownership entirely.(The report looked at data from the US Census Bureau and the annual Apartment List Renter Survey, which polled 1,851 millennials.)
The stark divide among millennials who find homeownership attainable and the peers who find it unattainable reflects the millennial wealth gap, in which one cohort of millennials is faring well and the other is struggling. As the pandemic intensifies this intragenerational gap, it's become even harder for millennials to close the wealth divide that exists outside their generation.
That would be the vast generational wealth gap between millennials and boomers. Millennials hold four times less US wealth than boomers held at their age, per Fed data, and earn 20% less than boomers did, a report by think tank New America found.
It explains why fewer millennials own homes than their parents did at their age, and why, despite the millennial housing boom of 2020, the generation is still wrestling to make up for lost ground.Copyright © 2021. Times Internet Limited. All rights reserved.For reprint rights. Times Syndication Service.
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