“Cheap Old Houses” Trend Takes Off
Now that remote work is more common a growing number Americans are having second thoughts about where they live, and that's reflected in a unique real estate trend. NBC's Liz McLaughlin reports.
(NBC News) — Now that remote work is more common a growing number Americans are having second thoughts about where they live.
Some are even finding cheap old houses on social media, and paying as little as $10,000 for historic fixer-uppers in far-off places.
Betsy Sweeny’s new dream home in West Virginia didn’t break the bank.
“The purchase price of my home was $18,500,” she says.
She found the listing on the “Cheap Old Houses” Instagram feed featuring homes under $100,000.
“I never expected we would have 1.2 million followers,” says Elizabeth Finkelstein, founder of the “Cheap Old Houses” account and the Circa website, which also focuses on similar real estate.
A following that’s been growing since the start of the pandemic, especially from remote-working millennials.
“They’re more likely to take the kind of risk move across the country and buy a house based on Instagram, which by the way many people have done,” Finkelstein says.
Read more here.