A lot has been made recently about the growing second home market and its relationship to Baby Boomer generation. The common premise is that, demographically, the Boomer generation is the driving force behind the second home sales by their newfound interest in leisure homes but taking a closer look at the numbers reveals a slightly different conclusion. - Second home sales made up 39.9% of all new and existing home sales in 2005. Thats up (way up!!) from 7% in 2000.
- 69.5% of second home sales were specifically investment properties with only 30.5% of second home sales going to vacation properties.
- Of the 30.5% of second home vacation properties, 13% listed “rental income” as a reason they bought the property leaving only 17.5% as purely leisure properties.
- Of the 30.5% of second home vacation properties, 40% were listed as detached single family homes while 31% were condos and the remaining 28% were listed as cabin, cottage, mobile home or other.
- Of the 30.5% of second home vacation properties, 6% were time share units.
- Of the 30.5% of second home vacation properties, 4% were said to be intended to be occupied by a child in the future when they went to school (presumably college)
- 21% of vacation home owners own two or more vacation homes.
- 65% of vacation home owners said their vacation homes were better investment than stocks.
The salient point here is that investment, not leisure, is the real motivator of the poorly named “second home” market with as little as 17.5% of second homes serving as purely leisure use homes. The overwhelming majority of second homes are specifically investment properties. In addition, even a healthy 13% of vacation properties are serving as rental income properties.
Incidentally, the popular perception of the boomer vacation home seems a bit fictitious as well with 6% of vacation homes being listed as timeshare units and 28% being listed as essentially lower cost shacks. Not to mention the 4% seem to be occupied as the primary residence of a child attending college.