Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

This is developers maximizing profit per lot.

All this means is there are enough buyers who can afford 2,800 sqft houses to keep builders from wasting a lot on a 1,600 sqft house. There could be a lot more people who want a cheaper 1,600 sqft house (including some of the 2,800 sqft house buyers!) than who want 2,800 sqft houses, but the market will keep delivering the latter as long as the return is better (for the return to improve for 1,600 sqft houses, see about convincing towns and cities to allow smaller lots, smaller setbacks, et c).





> All this means is there are enough buyers who can afford 2,800 sqft houses to keep builders from wasting a lot on a 1,600 sqft house.

So there's a limited supply of lots (or of permission to use those lots).


Exactly. Zoning laws affect lot sizes, remove them as in Houston or most other countries and the problem disappears.

Rural America often doesn’t have “zoning laws”. That hasn’t stopped my home price from more than doubling since 2012.

Zoning laws still influence rural prices! People fled expensive cities to more affordable rural areas due to city zoning, and that drove up prices in short term, as construction lags demand. Other factors (material costs, construction labor costs) had influence too

There’s multiple factors. Another is the zero interest rate era which inflated all asset prices. Money has been insanely cheap for a long time.



Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: