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Is Airbnb the reason housing is no longer affordable?

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Photo above - before there were Airbnbs, there were still parties like this. Name the film this screen shot came from . . .

I regularly encounter rants that “corporate America” is buying up vacant homes and turning them into rental properties. This could be true, but the statistical evidence for this so far is scant. Apparently, the top 3 corporations pulling this home rental stunt collectively own only 20,000 homes across America. Probably not the main culprit, IMHO.

Then I ran into the “Go Banking” article in the link below. “Become an Airbnb millionaire!!!” You can tell the author – Bill Faeth – is serious about this. He has his own website, and his vibe is very much like someone running for political office. “Family man, entrepreneur, investor, coach”. Maybe he’s a decorated veteran too? Dog lover? Okay I’ll stop snarking and stick with the housing affordability question.

Which do we need more of? Airbnb millionaires, or affordable housing?

The answer is NOT going to be creating a bunch of new laws which outlaw Airbnb, or even corporations, from buying homes listed for sale. There are millions of oldsters sitting in the dark in their 30-year-old tract homes in suburbia who would like to sell, and depending on the equity/profit to fund their last few years of retirement and world’s highest medical expenses. Telling them they can’t sell their home to “Bill Faeth – Airbnb millionaire” isn’t fair to people who’ve paid their mortgages faithfully for decades. But I do, however, have a solution.

If the Bill Faeth's of America want to vacuum up all the boomer and widow’s homes, they probably should pay a property tax rate different from someone who is actually living in that home. Let’s hold the line on property taxes paid by owners – whether new purchasers or long time law abiding citizens. But if you want to flip a house into a something like a mini Holiday Inn for weekend guests, you should pay commercial property taxes, not residential homeowner property taxes.

Your flipped Airbnb is going to create noise, traffic and crime beyond what the average homeowner is capable of generating. That Airbnb is going to be overcrowded, host rowdy parties, have unleashed dogs, underaged drinking and a general attitude of “eff it . . I don’t live here. I’ll be gone tomorrow. Party on!”

How much higher should property taxes be on Airbnbs? I’ll leave this to local voters and politicians. If they feel Airbnb guests are a boon to their community, they don’t need to set a different rate. Or they might even lower rates. But I’m guessing most communities will view Airbnb property taxes as a windfall, and hit on the idea of using them to fund police, schools, fire departments, ambulances, and trash collection.

At least, that’s what I would do, if I was a local mayor.

I’m just sayin’ . . .


I’m an Airbnb Millionaire: Follow These 3 Steps To Earn $250K in Rental Income

Bill Faeth – Entrepreneur, Family Man, Business Coach
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whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
Air BnB is a part of the shortage problem...😷
trollslayer · 46-50, M
@whowasthatmaskedman in some tourist areas, it is the biggest problem.
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
@trollslayer I accept that. But not so much in larger urban areas. But look at the amount or real estate bought up for rental by the corporate sector recently.. Much of which is just to store value in something other than $..
FoxyQueen · 51-55, F
@whowasthatmaskedman I think though, that the housing crisis isn't about rural areas, but city areas. Yeah, you can live outside the burbs for fairly cheap, get some land, etc, but your commute to work is going to be at least an hour and a half one way 5 days a week. (Ask me how I know!) You end up swaping the cost of housing for the cost of gas.

The cities, however, where the work is, tend to have low availability of housing, where people need housing the most to get the most out of their income. But those homes, particularly near good public transportation, sporting arenas, tourist areas, etc, are mostly AirBnB's, or simply vacant residences because they are owned by people outside the country.

When it comes to the housing issue and AirBnB's, it is the metro areas where people should be able to live without spending 3/4ths of their income to do so.

No one cares about the properties in the burbs or rural areas because they are inconvenient housing options. This issue is addressing the metro areas where housing is either nonexistent or people are outpriced due to corporate investors.
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
@FoxyQueen I cant argue with a single word of that. The same situation exists here. But I will throw a couple more complicating factors into the mix.. First, Covid.. It disrupted construction and fractured supply chains as well as messing with peoples finances.. (Fragile in the US even before hand). And the interest rate/recession see saw that has been running ever since has also created uncertainty, the investment killer..I am kind of glad I am far enough away not to be involved in that..Even though everyone feels what happens to america..😷