this post was submitted on 29 Jun 2026
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[–] COASTER1921@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Ya but property taxes are still significantly cheaper than rent, and most states have some exemption for a portion of the valuation your first home. The same doesn't apply to renters, and in many municipalities multifamily zoning has significantly higher property tax rates to begin with. Many conveniences of cities are built around homeowners since they're the majority of voters. In my old apartment despite trash at the property being taken by the city, apartment residents did not have access to the city dump for recycling and large trash items. Meanwhile residents owning a single family home did and could even get them picked up as part of their regular trash bill, which was $5/mo less than what we in the apartment paid for trash.

[–] SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 week ago

Do all the math please.

Home ownership includes property taxes and maintenance. New roof, new furnace, new water heater, etc. These are big bills every 12-15 years. Boomers did this with HELOCs, but HELOCs are gone as housing values in my region are going down from the peak in 2022.

Another big problem is contracting is unregulated and out of control, before 2020, contracts were typically materials x2 for labor, now they have no upper guidelines, just a rolling scam and they learned in 2020-22 that it's better to work less and charge more.

[–] chiliedogg@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

I'm not saying homeowners are in a worse position. Just that increasing values also hurt them.

My parents had to move out into the country into a smaller house because their taxes got so high they couldn't keep up after retirement when they quit getting raises.

And of course they'd taken out extra mortgages on their house to try and keep up with the increasing costs so they could stay in the town they'dlived in for 60 years, so they didn't actually have a ton of equity despite their home having massively increased in value.

And with all the other old people moving out into the country, the property values where they moved are skyrocketing, so they're already getting upside down and I'm already having to pitch in to help them pay the mortgage on the smaller home.