22% of renters now using entire check for rent. Gen Z get ready to stay with mommy and daddy till ya 40 or making profiles on roommate finder.com

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22% of U.S. renters say all their regular income goes toward rent payments, according to a recent Redfin-commissioned survey. 19% of renters report they have worked a job they hated to afford rent.


Just over one in five (22%) U.S. renters say all of their regular income goes directly to paying their rent, according to a recent Redfin-commissioned survey.


Working a second job is also a fairly common way for renters to pay housing costs, with 20% of renters citing that method. Nearly the same share (19%) say they have worked a job they hated to afford rent.

The survey findings in this report are from a Redfin-commissioned survey conducted by Ipsos in September 2024, fielded to 1,802 U.S. residents aged 18-65. This report focuses on the 894 renters who answered this question: Which of the following actions have you taken, if any, to help afford your rent payments? Respondents could select all that apply from a list of options, which are all listed in the chart.

One in seven (14%) renters have used a cash gift from family to pay rent. Renters also report dipping into money that was earmarked for retirement to pay their housing costs. More than one in 10 (13%) pulled money out of retirement funds early, and 12% contributed less to retirement savings.

While U.S. rents have flattened out over the last year, rents are much higher than they were before the pandemic. Because rental prices have surged faster than wages, it’s more difficult than it used to be for Americans to afford rentals, particularly lower-income Americans. Rental affordability may improve in the near future, with prices already showing signs of losing steam as more newly constructed apartments come on the market.

Even though it’s difficult for many Americans to make their rent payments, renting is a popular choice because affordability has become even more strained for people looking to buy a home. A separate Redfin analysis found that the number of renter households is growing three times faster than homeowner households, largely because the cost of buying has increased faster than the cost of renting.

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Source:https://www.redfin.com/news/survey-how-renters-afford-housing/
 
It's getting bad out here. I filed an eviction a couple weeks ago on one tenant and plan to file an eviction on another one if she doesn't pay this week.

Are there any rent assistance programs they qualify for?

Or they just bums skating outta paying rent?
 
Where the dudes from that thread who said renting is better than buying?

Had some of these folks focused on buying something, anything, before the pandemic, they wouldn't have to worry about rent going up on them now.
Most Gen Z were literal kids before the pandemic.The oldest Gen Z(96) would have have barely been out of college if they went straight through. Nobody has enough for a home down payment less than a year out of college unless they got a big help from the bank of mom and dad.

Folks need to stay with their parents if it works. Save up money until you can buy a home.
 
Are there any rent assistance programs they qualify for?

Or they just bums skating outta paying rent?

Nope... the one I filed eviction payed regularly until last month. The other one started paying late a few months ago and keep coming up with excuses. Evictions have shot up here in Houston the past 6 months. Cost of living is biting a lot of people in the ass in what was once an affordable city.
 
Nope... the one I filed eviction payed regularly until last month. The other one started paying late a few months ago and keep coming up with excuses. Evictions have shot up here in Houston the past 6 months. Cost of living is biting a lot of people in the ass in what was once an affordable city.

Whatever agency runs Section 8 in your county should also have a rent assistance program. In COVID all you needed was a lease and the landlords bank account. Not sure about now.
 
Whatever agency runs Section 8 in your county should also have a rent assistance program. In COVID all you needed was a lease and the landlords bank account. Not sure about now.

Resources are thin here bro especially now that Covid has passed. I had got a couple of my tenants signed up for rental assistance during Covid.

They're not even accepting section 8 applications last time I heard & the waiting list is years long. Also there's some scandal going on with housing authority that forced the CEO to step down.
 
Can you explain how it was self inflicted?

Around this time last year, I spent $2500 to fix a car and get it into good working condition.

I gave it to a family of 7 (two parents and five kids). Free of charge. Brand new tires, too. I recognized they needed an extra car; they were improving themselves. They moved into a trailer park, and the kids had a home, so I wanted to make life a little easier for them.

I also gave them some furniture and my daughter's old bed, which was also in excellent condition. Since I knew tax season was approaching, I figured that would be ok. Man, them negroes got evicted in May. They started living in motels and SOLD the fuckin car I gave them. Oh, did I mention I paid off all the fees and also paid 6 months of insurance for him? He sold the car for $300.

He and his family moved in with my mother-in-law. The wife doesn't work, and their second car broke down. So now, they are stuck, and I'm not helping anymore.

The next person was piss poor with managing money. She broke up with her boyfriend last year and wanted to prove that she could get everything they had together. She ended up putting herself in debt, lost her apartment, which I helped move her out of, lost her car, and got pregnant.

Man, I could go on and on about the irresponsibilities of people. I get that it's challenging out here, but what I have been witnessing is just piss poor decision-making.
 
Lol we are the original owners of the earth and cannot charge rent. But the murders and deceivers own everything. Sounds like our only real hope or real salvation is taking the earth back. About like apartheid. South Africa realized they were losing to many people everyday. They had to make a choice of weather to lose their lives on there knees begging for mercy or stand up and fight back. If they fight back they got a chance of getting their country back.
They let Mandela out of prison to let him become president and give the blacks some false hope. It worked so well they start preparing for Obama to become president over here. It kept our mind off of their rehearsal of killing us so many different ways and still keeping us locked up. While we are suppose to pay taxes to continue building white supremacy here and around the world such as Israel and Ukraine. If we think slavery has ended then we are fools. They took the chains off of our hands and feet and put them on the mind of the masses. Either you promote a white reality or you suffer the price of being different.
Actually this has been going on for thousands of years. The Rothschild's represent Jim Jones and Jonestown. Never worry about who rules as long as you control the purse strings. How many of us have successfully escaped selling our souls to a white reality?
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40 Plus years of Reaganomics/Neo-Liberalism.

Folks have spent the past 40 years focusing on shit that doesn’t affect them directly like….

• Bill Clinton’s Sexcapades
• Abortion
• LGBT
• Immigration
• Terrorism
• Debt Ceiling
• Obama’s Birth Certificate
• Crooked Hillary
• Covid Conspiracy Theories
• Critical Race Theory
• Biden being Old/Incompetent
• Harris being Black
• And the “Boogie Man of the Week”.

Keep focusing on nonsense and continue focusing on shit that doesn’t affect you directly.

We are seeing it now thru-out America.
 
I see people living in their cars from my condo balcony since COVID.

One is a very nice late model Lexus sedan.

Lots are holding down full time jobs and living out of cars.

All it takes is an eviction, bad breakup, or child support.
They got lots dedicated to these type of people in Cali.. this was going down b4 Covid cause the price of living.. the working homeless

This clip is 6 yrs old
 
Around this time last year, I spent $2500 to fix a car and get it into good working condition.

I gave it to a family of 7 (two parents and five kids). Free of charge. Brand new tires, too. I recognized they needed an extra car; they were improving themselves. They moved into a trailer park, and the kids had a home, so I wanted to make life a little easier for them.

I also gave them some furniture and my daughter's old bed, which was also in excellent condition. Since I knew tax season was approaching, I figured that would be ok. Man, them negroes got evicted in May. They started living in motels and SOLD the fuckin car I gave them. Oh, did I mention I paid off all the fees and also paid 6 months of insurance for him? He sold the car for $300.

He and his family moved in with my mother-in-law. The wife doesn't work, and their second car broke down. So now, they are stuck, and I'm not helping anymore.

The next person was piss poor with managing money. She broke up with her boyfriend last year and wanted to prove that she could get everything they had together. She ended up putting herself in debt, lost her apartment, which I helped move her out of, lost her car, and got pregnant.

Man, I could go on and on about the irresponsibilities of people. I get that it's challenging out here, but what I have been witnessing is just piss poor decision-making.

THIS
 

It’s wild, fam.

I constantly hear about “how hard it is out here.” Which I understand. I’m not trying to trivialize the shit people got to deal with on a regular. But to observe individuals make shitty decision after shitty decision, helps me realize that some folks just got to figure it out or fall on their face.

And they have the audacity to ask for advice or complain to me. They don’t even listen to the advice of people that’s actually stable. They would rather listen to mofos that ain’t got shit.
 
Around this time last year, I spent $2500 to fix a car and get it into good working condition.

I gave it to a family of 7 (two parents and five kids). Free of charge. Brand new tires, too. I recognized they needed an extra car; they were improving themselves. They moved into a trailer park, and the kids had a home, so I wanted to make life a little easier for them.

I also gave them some furniture and my daughter's old bed, which was also in excellent condition. Since I knew tax season was approaching, I figured that would be ok. Man, them negroes got evicted in May. They started living in motels and SOLD the fuckin car I gave them. Oh, did I mention I paid off all the fees and also paid 6 months of insurance for him? He sold the car for $300.

He and his family moved in with my mother-in-law. The wife doesn't work, and their second car broke down. So now, they are stuck, and I'm not helping anymore.

The next person was piss poor with managing money. She broke up with her boyfriend last year and wanted to prove that she could get everything they had together. She ended up putting herself in debt, lost her apartment, which I helped move her out of, lost her car, and got pregnant.

Man, I could go on and on about the irresponsibilities of people. I get that it's challenging out here, but what I have been witnessing is just piss poor decision-making.
Bad decision making always been a killer...but its especially dangerous in this economy...the margin for correction of stupidity is extremely low in these times...even those of us who are seemingly doing "good" gotta be careful and make sure to ask ourselves "what if"

Rough to see some folks fuck up the blessing you gave em...a working car for free? man give that to some people and watch how they turn their lives around
 
Bad decision making always been a killer...but its especially dangerous in this economy...the margin for correction of stupidity is extremely low in these times...even those of us who are seemingly doing "good" gotta be careful and make sure to ask ourselves "what if"

Rough to see some folks fuck up the blessing you gave em...a working car for free? man give that to some people and watch how they turn their lives around

No doubt. I know I’m a job loss away from situations getting interesting for me. I have safety nets to give me several months, but nothing is promised so you always have to stay on your toes in case shit hits the fan.

And you’re right about the margin of error in this economy being very slim. That’s why I tried to help out, but I realized I can’t help how people moves and make decisions.

When I help people, I help with ZERO expectations. These particular individuals know they’ve burned a bridge. Sometimes you just have to let folks figure it out.
 
Around this time last year, I spent $2500 to fix a car and get it into good working condition.

I gave it to a family of 7 (two parents and five kids). Free of charge. Brand new tires, too. I recognized they needed an extra car; they were improving themselves. They moved into a trailer park, and the kids had a home, so I wanted to make life a little easier for them.

I also gave them some furniture and my daughter's old bed, which was also in excellent condition. Since I knew tax season was approaching, I figured that would be ok. Man, them negroes got evicted in May. They started living in motels and SOLD the fuckin car I gave them. Oh, did I mention I paid off all the fees and also paid 6 months of insurance for him? He sold the car for $300.

He and his family moved in with my mother-in-law. The wife doesn't work, and their second car broke down. So now, they are stuck, and I'm not helping anymore.

The next person was piss poor with managing money. She broke up with her boyfriend last year and wanted to prove that she could get everything they had together. She ended up putting herself in debt, lost her apartment, which I helped move her out of, lost her car, and got pregnant.

Man, I could go on and on about the irresponsibilities of people. I get that it's challenging out here, but what I have been witnessing is just piss poor decision-making.

HOLY SH*T
 
Bad decision making always been a killer...but its especially dangerous in this economy...the margin for correction of stupidity is extremely low in these times...even those of us who are seemingly doing "good" gotta be careful and make sure to ask ourselves "what if"

Rough to see some folks fuck up the blessing you gave em...a working car for free? man give that to some people and watch how they turn their lives around

^^^^

That part

I hope these horribly negative experiences don't make my brother stop helping all together which I can understand.

There are so many people that would have appreciated and benefitted from such kindness
 
Does Venus have a point? Or is she only speaking to people with "100,000 to 200,000" to put down on a house?


It really depends on where you are in life. Being a renter for over 15 years, I saved a lot of money and was able to do more with it. Now that I am owning, I am paying three times more in a mortgage than I was renting, so there are many things I had to cut back on. I have to be more mindful on how I spend because my cost of living has went up.

I also don’t have think about being kicked out of the house because the owner died or the owner wants to sell the property. That piece of mind is invaluable.

If people don’t want the responsibility of being a homeowner, then I 100% understand. I’m not even going to knock them for it.

Again, I rented for over 15 years. I gave my money to a person with no return, but I saved a lot at the same time. Saved enough to get me into a home I’m satisfied with.
 
It really depends on where you are in life. Being a renter for over 15 years, I saved a lot of money and was able to do more with it. Now that I am owning, I am paying three times more in a mortgage than I was renting, so there are many things I had to cut back on. I have to be more mindful on how I spend because my cost of living has went up.

I also don’t have think about being kicked out of the house because the owner died or the owner wants to sell the property. That piece of mind is invaluable.

If people don’t want the responsibility of being a homeowner, then I 100% understand. I’m not even going to knock them for it.

Again, I rented for over 15 years. I gave my money to a person with no return, but I saved a lot at the same time. Saved enough to get me into a home I’m satisfied with.

Vulcan bars
 
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