Seattle Millennials Should Move to Houston

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer says it has found the best Seattle homes for Millennials. Judging by the paper’s suggestions, Seattle Millennials should move to Houston. Houston may not have Mt. Rainier, but it has beautiful lakes, a sea coast that is just about as nice as Washington’s (though not as nice as Oregon’s), and most important, it doesn’t have urban-growth boundaries which means it has much more affordable housing.


Click any photo to go to the listing for that property.

The P-I‘s first suggestion is a 720-square foot, two-bedroom, one-bath home on a 5,000-square-foot lot. On the plus side, the living room has hardwood floors. On the minus side, the asking price is $259,950–and if Seattle’s housing market is anything like Portland’s, it will go for more than that. At the asking price, the cost is $361 per square foot.

As an alternative, allow me to suggest this 720-square-foot home in Houston’s University Area, not too far from downtown. It has new paint and an updated kitchen and, like the Seattle home, it is on a 5,000-square-foot lot. Unlike the Seattle home, the cost is just $86,500. That’s just $120 per square foot–and the sellers will probably accept a little less.

The P-I‘s next suggestion is this cute little home in North Seattle. At 770 square feet, it is only a little larger than the first one, but has hardwood floors throughout, plus a covered patio and a firepit in the backyard. The lot is about 6,500 square feet. The owners are asking a mere $349,000, which–if you can get it for that–is $453 a square foot.

As an alternative, I direct your attention to this 3-bedroom, one-bath home in East Houston that is 902 square feet and sits on a 8,265-square-foot lot. At $108,000, it is less than $120 per square foot.


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If 770 square feet isn’t going to do it for you and you really do have $350,000 to spend, how about this beautiful 4-bedroom, 3-1/2-bath, 3,458-square-foot home in Humble, a suburb just north of Houston? Sitting on a 9,000-square-foot lot that is just steps away from Lake Houston, the owners are asking $349,000, or $101 per square foot.

Or perhaps you don’t mind living in a smaller house, but like the idea of getting away to a lake now and then. If so, buy a smaller home in Houston for $100,000 or so and then also buy this home on Lake Tristan, which is about two hours from downtown Houston–perfect for weekend getaways.

The house is 716-square-feet with two bedrooms and two baths and has its own dock on the lake, as shown above. While it looks to me like the gazebo over that dock could use a little work, the house itself is in great shape and being offered for just $99,500, or $139 per square foot. This plus either of the less expensive home in Houston would cost far less than the least expensive home suggested by the P-I.

The Post-Intelligencer has one more suggestion, this condominium that has been carved out of what looks like a remodeled apartment building in the popular Capitol Hill neighborhood. It has hardwood and tile floors, and it includes a free exercise program: since it is on the top floor, you get to do stair climbs every day. The 1-bedroom, 1-bath condo is just 499 square feet, so you won’t have to do a lot of housekeeping, and it comes with a parking space–for your bicycle. The price is only $285,000 ($571 per square foot), plus annual maintenance fees of $356.

If you like the idea of a condominium near downtown, let me suggest this beautiful loft in Houston’s Eado (east of downtown) neighborhood, which claims to be the “Art & Soul of the City.” At 1,449 square feet, plus carport parking big enough for your actual car, the two-bedroom, two-bath loft is nearly three times as big as the one on Capitol Hill. The kitchen features granite-and-stainless steel while the bathroom is also granite. Maintenance fees are slightly higher at $403 per year, but that’s more than offset by the lower price of $249,500 ($172 per square foot).

The good news is that Seattle Millennials don’t have to move to Houston to find affordable housing. All they have to do is convince the Washington legislature to repeal the state’s growth-management law and King County to repeal its growth-management plan and urban-growth boundary. Once that is done, Seattle prices will soon be as affordable as Houston’s.

Puget Sound Millennials who don’t want the millennium or so that will take to happen but who just have to live near the mountains might consider Boise, Colorado Springs, or another Rocky Mountain location. According to Coldwell Banker, a 4-bedroom, 2-bath, 2,200-square-foot home in Houston costs about $274,000, while in Seattle it is $726,000. The same-sized home in Boise would be $273,000; Colorado Springs is $252,000; and Logan, Utah is $188,000. For about the price of North Seattle’s 770-square-foot house, you could buy 2,200-square-foot homes for $179,000 each in Casa Grande, Arizona and Great Falls, Montana and enjoy Montana winters and Arizona summers, or, if you prefer, the other way around.

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About The Antiplanner

The Antiplanner is a forester and economist with more than fifty years of experience critiquing government land-use and transportation plans.

8 Responses to Seattle Millennials Should Move to Houston

  1. Scott says:

    Damn, those are small, like in an LDC (3rd world is really archaic). Although, I live low now, in a 550′ studio, I grew up in a 3,000’+ house on 1/2 an acre. Since I & my brother moved out, my parents upgraded — having two houses at 8,000 on 5 acres — go figure — well, they got more money, via capitalism.

    Are the the top 1% responsible for your financial problems?

    Who employs you? (Where does gov money from?)

    Anyway, live like you want (without harming others).

    You want a lot of mass transit? Goto dense cities (~5 choices in the US). Please don’t make others live you would like, while driving yourself.

  2. OFP2003 says:

    Yes, but the Seattle houses have super-saturated color photographs!!! All that rain in Seattle must keep the sun from fading the colors (paint, pigments, plants, animals).

  3. Frank says:

    “The good news is that Seattle Millennials don’t have to move to Houston to find affordable housing. All they have to do is convince the Washington legislature to repeal the state’s growth-management law and King County to repeal its growth-management plan and urban-growth boundary. Once that is done, Seattle prices will soon be as affordable as Houston’s.”

    Bull$hit.

  4. Scott says:

    As you probably know, once gov restrictions are dropped, prices will drop.

    Go figure. These dopes in power…

  5. Frank says:

    “As you probably know, once gov restrictions are dropped, prices will drop.”

    No one has yet to show how much they would drop in Seattle. Seattle PROPER. The average list price in Magnolia/Queen Anne is over $800k right now. The AP is smoking high THC dope if he thinks those prices will come down to Houston (a totally different geographic type of city) prices if only the UGB were abolished.

    It’s total bullshit.

  6. btreynolds says:

    I don’t think the AP is suggesting that prices would drop to Houston levels. He knows too much about economics to say that. To suggest there there would not be a change in prices with increased supply due to the removal of artificial barriers seems a bit arrogant.

  7. Frank says:

    Ok. Then explain this statement: “Once that [UGB repeal] is done, Seattle prices will soon be as affordable as Houston’s.”

    To suggest there there would not be a change in prices with increased supply due to the removal of artificial barriers seems a bit arrogant.

    I never stated or even suggested that, so don’t strawman me please.

  8. C. P. Zilliacus says:

    The Antiplanner wrote (emphasis added):

    The price is only $285,000 ($571 per square foot), plus annual maintenance fees of $356. and

    Maintenance fees are slightly higher at $403 per year, but that’s more than offset by the lower price of $249,500 ($172 per square foot).

    Are those annual or monthly charges? They sound to me like they could be monthly and not annual.

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