After three straight months of price increases, the May 2012 Trulia Price Monitor showed no change in asking prices from April. But, at the same time, rent increases keep accelerating.
Each month we publish the Trulia Price Monitor and Trulia Rent Monitor, which are the earliest leading indicators of how asking prices and rents are trending nationally and locally, adjusted for the mix of listed homes and seasonal factors. Here’s the scoop on how prices and rents did in May.
After Three Months of Increases, Asking Prices Flat in May
Asking prices on for-sale homes were unchanged in May month over month, seasonally adjusted. Because prices rose in February, March and April, prices remain 1.6% higher in May than one quarter ago, and most of the country has seen price increases: 86 of the 100 largest metro areas had quarter-over-quarter price increases in May, seasonally adjusted.
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May 2012 Trulia Price Monitor Summary |
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| % change in asking prices | # of 100 largest metros with asking-price increases | % change in asking prices, excluding foreclosures | |
| Month-over-month, seasonally adjusted | 0.0% | (not reported) | 0.4% |
| Quarter-over-quarter, seasonally adjusted | 1.6% | 86 | 2.1% |
| Year-over-year | -0.2% | 41 | 1.0% |
Trulia’s Spring 2012 Metro Movers report takes a deep dive into why people are searching for homes where they do.
Every three months or so, we take a close look at the home searches on Trulia: where are the searchers, and where are the homes they’re looking at? This time around we’re taking a close look at why people search where they do, and we’ve uncovered these two facts:
—- Most short-distance searches (under 100 miles away) are toward the suburbs or smaller cities.
—- Long-distance searches (more than 500 miles away) are toward more affordable markets with worse job prospects.
People want sprawl and don’t care about jobs? Of course, it’s not quite that simple – but there’s more than a grain of truth in that statement. Let’s start with the short-distance searches and move to the long-distance searches.
Staying Close, But In Need Of More Elbow Room
Over the past year (April 2011-March 2012), 44% of all the searches on Trulia were within a metro area, and 56% were to another metro area (not including searches from outside the U.S.). Of these “cross-metro” searches, roughly one-third were “short-distance” (less than 100 miles away), one-third were “middle-distance” (100 to 500 miles away), and one-third were “long-distance (more than 500 miles away). The top 10 searches were all short-distance searches, with more people looking from Los Angeles to Riverside-San Bernardino than between any other pair of metros. Of these 10, seven are from bigger to smaller metros (e.g., Dallas to Fort Worth) or from a dense urban metro to its suburbs (e.g., New York to Long Island). Here’s the list.
| Table 1: Top 10 Home Searches | ||
| # | Origin Metro | Destination Metro |
| 1 | Los Angeles, CA | Riverside-San Bernardino, CA |
| 2 | New York, NY-NJ | Long Island, NY |
| 3 | Orange County, CA | Los Angeles, CA |
| 4 | Dallas, TX | Fort Worth, TX |
| 5 | Los Angeles, CA | Orange County, CA |
| 6 | Detroit, MI | Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, MI |
| 7 | New York, NY-NJ | Newark, NJ-PA |
| 8 | Newark, NJ-PA | New York, NY-NJ |
| 9 | Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, MI | Detroit, MI |
| 10 | Washington, DC-VA-MD-WV | Bethesda-Rockville-Frederick, MD |
Note: all of these top 10 searches overall happen to be short-distance searches.
Neighboring metros share many of the same features: they tend to have the same weather, for instance. But nearby metros can differ a lot in other ways. House hunters searching within 100 miles are twice as likely to look at more suburban or smaller markets, where neighborhoods typically consist of single-family homes with yards, than at more urban or larger markets where homes are smaller and more likely to be apartments or condos (measured by density). Suburban and smaller-city markets also tend to have had bigger price drops during the housing crash and lower-cost housing now. However, these places still attract more home searches even when they are just as expensive as nearby urban markets. More than twice as many searches are from crowded Los Angeles to suburban Ventura County than in the reverse direction, even though homes are just as expensive and the housing bust was similarly severe; same with Boston and Cape Cod, and New York and Fairfield County CT.
Clearly, house hunters face a dilemma. On the one hand, people tell us they want the benefits of city living: nearby shops and restaurants, public transit and a shorter commute. But when it comes to searching for homes, they’re more likely to sacrifice these amenities in favor of more space. That’s not just because people love sprawl: many government policies, like interstate highway investments and strict regulations on urban development, encourage faster growth in lower-density areas. When people look from dense cities to sprawling suburbs, it’s partly because that’s where the homes are available at the price they can afford. In the future, people could start looking more toward big cities if baby boomers want to leave the suburbs; if rising gas prices make commuting from the suburbs too expensive; or if government policies become less biased against cities. But for now, people still have their eye on the ‘burbs.
The top middle-distance searches (table 2) include lots of rival city pairs: Dallas and Houston, Washington DC and New York, and so on. Eight out of the top 10 middle-distance searches are in the Sunbelt states – nine if you count Oklahoma. What explains these middle-distance searches? Lower density is still the main draw, as well bigger price declines.
| Table 2: Top 10 Middle-Distance Home Searches | ||
| # | Origin Metro | Destination Metro |
| 1 | Oklahoma City, OK | Tulsa, OK |
| 2 | Los Angeles, CA | San Diego, CA |
| 3 | Houston, TX | San Antonio, TX |
| 4 | Houston, TX | Austin, TX |
| 5 | Tucson, AZ | Phoenix, AZ |
| 6 | Los Angeles, CA | Las Vegas, NV |
| 7 | Phoenix, AZ | Tucson, AZ |
| 8 | Dallas, TX | Houston, TX |
| 9 | Washington, DC-VA-MD-WV | New York, NY-NJ |
| 10 | Los Angeles, CA | Phoenix, AZ |
Note: “middle-distance” searches are 100-to-500 miles away.
Going the Distance for Bargains and Warm Winters, But Not Jobs
Long-distance searches are where the really interesting story lies. These searches for homes 500 miles or more away account for 20% of all searches on our site. Of these long-distance searches, 54% are toward the west and 62% are toward the south, thanks in part to all those New Yorkers looking at homes in Florida (table 3). Los Angeles to New York is the only eastbound or northbound search on the list. The top long-distance searches look really different from the top short- and middle-distance searches – and it turns out that people searching for a home near where they currently live are looking for something very different than people looking to move far, far away.
| Table 3: Top 10 Long-Distance Home Searches | ||
| # | Origin Metro | Destination Metro |
| 1 | New York, NY-NJ | Los Angeles, CA |
| 2 | New York, NY-NJ | Miami, FL |
| 3 | New York, NY-NJ | West Palm Beach, FL |
| 4 | New York, NY-NJ | Atlanta, GA |
| 5 | Chicago, IL | Phoenix, AZ |
| 6 | New York, NY-NJ | Orlando, FL |
| 7 | New York, NY-NJ | Fort Lauderdale, FL |
| 8 | New York, NY-NJ | Tampa-Saint Petersburg, FL |
| 9 | Los Angeles, CA | New York, NY-NJ |
| 10 | New York, NY-NJ | Chicago, IL |
Note: “long-distance” searches are more than 500 miles away.
A long-distance search is very different from a short-distance search: if you’re open to moving anywhere in the US, you’ve got a huge diversity of places to choose from: sunny, snowy, mountainous, coastal, booming, affordable, old, new and so on.
Affordability matters a lot for long-distance searchers, who are 1.7 times more likely to look for homes in markets with bigger price drops in the bust, relative to where they live now, than in markets that held up better. They’re also 1.4 times more likely to look for homes in markets with a lower price-per-square-foot, relative to where they live now, than in more expensive markets. Long-distance searchers also factor in weather: people are 1.8 times more likely to look for homes in markets with warmer winters than in markets with colder winters, relative to where they live now. Density matters less for long-distance searchers – most people don’t need to move across the country just to find more space.
Here’s the surprise. You’d think that people would search where jobs are plentiful, but you’d be wrong. Most long-distance searchers look for homes in markets with higher unemployment and slower job growth than where they live now. For instance, seven times as many people in Washington DC (5.9 percent unemployment) looked for homes in Orlando (10.3 percent unemployment) than in the reverse direction. Here are other searches where twice as many people searched from the lower-unemployment market to the higher-unemployment market than in the reverse direction:
| Table 4: Searches Toward Higher-Unemployment Metros | ||
| # | Origin Metro (Lower Unemployment) | Destination Metro (Higher Unemployment) |
| 1 | Washington, DC-VA-MD-WV | Atlanta, GA |
| 2 | Cleveland, OH | Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL |
| 3 | Seattle, WA | Detroit, MI |
| 4 | Oakland, CA | Las Vegas, NV |
| 5 | Philadelphia, PA | Los Angeles, CA |
| 6 | Boston, MA | Orlando, FL |
| 7 | Minneapolis-Saint Paul, MN-WI | Phoenix, AZ |
| 8 | Chicago, IL | Riverside-San Bernardino, CA |
| 9 | Baltimore, MD | Tampa-Saint Petersburg, FL |
| 10 | Long Island, NY | Tampa-Saint Petersburg, FL |
Note: listed in alphabetical order of destination metro. Each pair has at least twice as many searches toward the destination metro than in the reverse direction, and the destination metro has an unemployment rate at least two points higher than the origin metro. Unemployment rate is averaged over 2011 plus first two months of 2012.
People aren’t masochists: they’re not looking to move in order to be unemployed. Rather, they are looking primarily for affordable, warm locations, and those locations happen to have much higher unemployment rates than other markets do. The relationship between affordability–as measured by home price declines during the bust–and unemployment is especially strong: markets like Las Vegas and Bakersfield may have great bargains, but those price drops went hand-in-hand with job losses and high unemployment. This is true overall: the bigger the price drop, the higher the unemployment rate. And, as a general rule, metros with more inbound searches had bigger price drops and have higher unemployment than those with more outbound searches.
Not every search, of course, is by someone who is about to move and will need a job. Retirees, investors and people just looking for fun might not care about the unemployment rate in markets where they’re searching for homes. But the rest of us probably need a job wherever we’re moving. Few metros have bargains (big price drops) AND a low unemployment rate. Phoenix, Tucson and Fort Lauderdale almost fit the bill: they saw big price drops yet unemployment remains lower than other metros where prices plummeted.
Bottom line: if you’re making a big move and looking at markets across the country, don’t ignore the job market. Unless you’re retired, buying an investment property, or are expecting to live off your Facebook shares, remember that markets with great housing deals tend to have higher unemployment. If you still have to work for a living, you should know what the job market looks like before you plan your next move.
Editor’s note: discussion of metros with large price drops from peak revised 5/24/12.
0 commentsThe April 2012 Trulia Price Monitor revealed quarter-over-quarter asking price increases in 92 of the 100 largest metros. Meanwhile, rents rose 5.6% nationally year over year.
One month ago, we introduced the Trulia Price Monitor and Trulia Rent Monitor as the earliest leading indicators of how asking prices and rents are trending nationally and locally. So what happened to prices and rents in April?
April’s Price Rise Makes a Three-Month Streak
Nationally, housing prices have bottomed and are on the rise. Asking prices on for-sale homes were 1.9% higher in April than one quarter ago. A 0.5% month-over-month rise in April, on top of month-over-month price increases in March and February, makes for three months in a row of rising asking prices, after adjusting for typical seasonal trends. In fact, prices have been stable or rising for the past eight months, except for a dip in December 2011. This marks a new milestone: asking prices were 0.2% higher in April than a year ago. Before April, prices were still falling year-over-year.

Not only are rising prices starting to look like a real trend: they’re also coming to a market near you — if they haven’t already. Asking prices increased year-over-year in 44 out of the 100 largest metropolitan areas, with Miami and Phoenix leading the charge. Why these markets? One factor is job growth, which boosts housing demand. Miami, Phoenix, Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills (suburban Detroit) and Denver all saw strong employment gains in the past year. Another factor is the big price declines after the bubble, which attracted house hunters and investors searching for bargains to those markets. Most of the metros with the largest price increases in the last year had huge price declines during the bust, including Phoenix, Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills and the four Florida metros in the top ten. But among the metros with the largest price declines over the past year, only three–Sacramento, Las Vegas and Fresno–had huge overall price drops after the bubble burst.
| Top 10 Metros With Largest Price Increases | ||
| # | U.S. Metro | Y-o-Y % Change in Asking Price |
| 1 | Miami, FL | 16.1% |
| 2 | Phoenix, AZ | 15.8% |
| 3 | Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL | 14.1% |
| 4 | Pittsburgh, PA | 8.5% |
| 5 | West Palm Beach, FL | 7.4% |
| 6 | Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, MI | 6.9% |
| 7 | Orlando, FL | 6.5% |
| 8 | Denver, CO | 6.3% |
| 9 | Bethesda-Rockville-Frederick, MD | 5.2% |
| 10 | Little Rock, AR | 4.8% |
| Top 10 Metros With Largest Price Declines | ||
| # | U.S. Metro | Y-o-Y % Change in Asking Price |
| 1 | Tacoma, WA | -8.5% |
| 2 | Columbia, SC | -7.2% |
| 3 | Seattle, WA | -6.4% |
| 4 | Wilmington, DE-MD-NJ | -6.1% |
| 5 | Gary, IN | -5.5% |
| 6 | Sacramento, CA | -5.4% |
| 7 | Milwaukee, WI | -5.4% |
| 8 | Las Vegas, NV | -5.3% |
| 9 | Atlanta, GA | -5.0% |
| 10 | Fresno, CA | -4.7% |
Note: Rankings based on the year-over-year changes in asking price among the 100 largest U.S. metropolitan areas. Want to see the full list of price and rent changes for all 100 metros? You can download it here.
Seattleites, take heart: in the most recent quarter, most of the metros with year-over-over price declines have turned around. Prices rose quarter over quarter in 92 of the 100 largest metros, including in Seattle, Las Vegas and Atlanta. See the full list of metros with yearly and quarterly price changes here.
Rents Keep Marching Upward
Rental demand remains strong, with rents rising 5.6% nationally year over year. One reason for this continuous climb is job growth, as the metros with the largest rent increases tend to have fast job growth, like San Francisco and San Jose. But another reason why rents keep going up is the decline in homeownership: foreclosures forced some owners to become renters, while tight credit and the weak job market put homeownership out of reach for many others. The result: rents have risen even while prices were falling, and now that prices are rising, rents are rising even faster.
| Top 10 Metros With Largest Rent Increases | ||
| # | U.S. Metro | Y-o-Y % Change in Asking Rent |
| 1 | Edison-New Brunswick, NJ | 15.6% |
| 2 | San Francisco, CA | 13.2% |
| 3 | Miami, FL | 12.3% |
| 4 | Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, MI | 11.8% |
| 5 | Indianapolis, IN | 11.1% |
| 6 | Colorado Springs, CO | 10.2% |
| 7 | Denver, CO | 9.8% |
| 8 | Middlesex County, MA | 9.7% |
| 9 | Kansas City, MO-KS | 9.6% |
| 10 | San Jose, CA | 9.6% |
Note: Rankings based on the year-over-year changes in asking rents among the largest U.S. metropolitan areas. Want to see the full list of price and rent changes for all metros? You can download it here.
Let’s Get Local: What About Prices and Rents in My Neighborhood?
Even within a metro area, neighborhoods have their own price and rent trends. This month we looked at trends within five large metros: New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington DC and the San Francisco Bay Area.
In the New York area, prices rose year over year in Brooklyn, Manhattan and Staten Island, while declining in the rest of the region. But rents rose everywhere – both in the City and suburban areas.
| New York City Area | ||
| Borough or County | Y-o-Y % Change in Asking Price |
Y-o-Y % Change in Rent |
| Brooklyn | 2.4% | 5.7% |
| Manhattan | 1.1% | 6.8% |
| Staten Island | 0.8% | * |
| Hudson, NJ (Jersey City) | -0.2% | 7.7% |
| Queens | -1.6% | 7.1% |
| Bronx | -1.7% | 4.7% |
| Nassau, NY (Long Island) | -2.1% | 4.5% |
| Bergen, NJ (Hackensack) | -3.0% | 2.0% |
| Westchester, NY | -3.1% | 3.4% |
Note: In these tables, asterisks (*) denote areas where sample sizes are too small to report year-over-year changes in rents.
In Los Angeles, asking prices increased only in the downtown area. Prices fell elsewhere throughout the region, most of all in Long Beach. As in New York, though, rents rose throughout the region, except for Long Beach, with downtown LA experiencing both the biggest increases in prices and rents.
| Los Angeles | ||
| Area Code | Y-o-Y % Change in Asking Price |
Y-o-Y % Change in Rent |
| Downtown LA (213) | 3.8% | 8.9% |
| Riverside (951) | -0.1% | 1.8% |
| San Fernando Valley (818/747) | -0.7% | 4.5% |
| Orange County South (949) | -0.9% | 4.9% |
| San Bernardino (909) | -1.6% | 5.5% |
| Central LA (323) | -1.8% | 4.2% |
| Pasadena / San Gabriel Valley (626) | -3.4% | 4.0% |
| Orange County North (714/657) | -3.5% | 3.1% |
| Westside LA/Beaches/ Coast (310/424) | -3.5% | 1.9% |
| Long Beach (562) | -4.8% | -6.3% |
In Chicago, asking prices fell in all areas, but the northern and southern suburbs fared worst.
| Chicago | ||
| Area Code | Y-O-Y % Change in Asking Price |
Y-O-Y % Change in Rent |
| Chicago except downtown (773) | -2.0% | 5.6% |
| Loop and Near North Side (312) | -2.1% | 8.8% |
| Western Suburbs (630/331) | -2.3% | 8.2% |
| North/Northwestern Suburbs (847/224) | -4.1% | 3.3% |
| South Suburbs (708) | -6.7% | * |
In the Washington DC area, prices rose throughout the region, though least in Prince George’s County, MD.
| Washington DC | ||
| County | Y-O-Y % Change in Asking Price |
Y-O-Y % Change in Rent |
| District of Columbia | 5.2% | 4.0% |
| Montgomery, MD | 4.9% | 0.7% |
| Prince William, VA | 4.9% | 11.5% |
| Loudoun, VA | 4.8% | 5.2% |
| Fairfax, VA | 3.3% | 5.7% |
| Arlington and Alexandria, VA | 2.0% | 4.4% |
| Prince George’s, MD | 0.6% | 4.7% |
Note: Fairfax county includes Falls Church and Fairfax cities. Prince William county includes Manassas and Manassas Park cities.
Finally, in the San Francisco Bay Area, rents were on a tear, rising more than 10% in San Francisco itself, San Mateo county and Alameda county. But asking prices were up in San Francisco while down in Oakland.
| San Francisco Bay Area | ||
| County | Y-O-Y % Change in Asking Price |
Y-O-Y % Change in Rent |
| San Francisco | 2.5% | 11.9% |
| Santa Clara (San Jose) | 1.7% | 9.6% |
| Contra Costa | 0.6% | 6.0% |
| Marin | -0.8% | * |
| San Mateo | -1.7% | 15.9% |
| Alameda (Oakland) | -4.9% | 11.7% |
What patterns emerge? Among these large metros, the most central urban areas tend to have larger price increases (or smaller declines) than suburban areas, but there are exceptions – and there’s no general pattern across the US overall. In the Atlanta region, prices year on year were down less (-2.9%) in Atlanta (404 area code) than in the suburban areas (-5.5%, outside the 404 area code). However, in the Seattle region, prices year on year were down more (-6.6%) in Seattle itself (206 area code) – than on the Eastside (-5.2%, 425 area code). But what the quarter-over-quarter trend tells us is that it’s going to get harder to find neighborhoods where prices are declining.
Will the rise in asking prices and rents continue next month? Check back in on Tuesday, June 5, 2012 at 10AM ET to find out when we release the findings from May.
How did we put this report together? To recap the methodology, the Trulia Price Monitor and the Trulia Rent Monitor track asking home prices and rents on a monthly basis, adjusting for the changing composition of listed homes. The Trulia Price Monitor also accounts for the regular seasonal fluctuations in asking prices in order to reveal the underlying trend in prices. The Monitors can detect price movements at least three months before the major sales-price indexes do. Last month’s post explains how the Monitors compare with other price indexes out there, and our FAQs provide all the technical details.
Of all the cross-metro home searches happening on Trulia, 63% are for digs in Suburbia (err… lower density, more sprawling areas)
Taking a page from “Back to the Future,” the data geniuses at Trulia have created a never before seen housing study that starts with where people are today and gives you the inside scoop on where they want to live tomorrow. That’s right folks, we’re gazing into the future of housing demand and here’s what we see.
I’m Gonna Move to the Outskirts of Town
True or false – creating more jobs in an area means that more people will want to buy homes in that area. Believe it or not, the answer is false. While having a job will make a prospective homebuyer more willing to settle down, it doesn’t mean he or she will do so in the exact same place where they work.
Let’s face it, city living ain’t cheap and most people would rather get a better bang for their buck when it comes to real estate. Compared to big cities where rents are getting ridiculous and home prices are up the wazoo, suburbia offers cheaper living and a lot of more living space. As we shared in a previous post, 59% of all the home searches on Trulia happen outside a house hunter’s current metro area. Check out these top cross-metro searches…notice how close they all are?
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Top 10 Cross-Metro Searches |
||
| # | FROM – Where People Are Today: | TO – Where People Want To Move Next: |
| 1 | Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA | Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA |
| 2 | New York-White Plains, NY-NJ | Long Island, NY |
| 3 | Orange County, CA | Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA |
| 4 | Dallas, TX | Fort Worth, TX |
| 5 | Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA | Orange County, CA |
| 6 | Detroit, MI | Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, MI |
| 7 | New York-White Plains, NY-NJ | Newark, NJ |
| 8 | Newark, NJ | New York-White Plains, NY-NJ |
| 9 | Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, MI | Detroit, MI |
| 10 | Washington DC-Northern Virginia | Bethesda-Rockville-Frederick, MD |
But before we move on, a couple of things worth noting here about these cross-metro searches– 56% are for homes where prices have dropped the most since the bust and 63% are for homes in the boonies (err…lower-density, more sprawling areas…to be more accurate).
House Hunters Loving Bargain Bin Homes Right Now
Trulia’s newly-minted Metro Movers Index is a simple way to know where people are looking to move and where they’re not. In a nutshell, we came up with this index by dividing all the house hunting activity by outsiders wanting to move to a metro area by all the house hunting activity by locals wanting to leave a metro. Index scores above 1 means there are more people wanting to move in than leave. Vice-versa, index scores below 1 means there are more people wanting to leave than move in.
To get an idea of which metro area will likely be losing residents and which one will be gaining, check out this heat map. Red means it’s bleeding and things aren’t looking good while blue means it’s the coolest kid on the block and everyone wants to head in that direction.

Now you’re probably wondering – which metro areas came out on top as the most popular and which ones aren’t looking so hot. More likely than not, the former is in Florida and the later is in our nation’s capital.
| Housing Demand Strongest in South and Southwest | ||
| # | U.S. Metropolitan Area | Metro Movers Index |
| 1 | North Port-Bradenton-Sarasota, FL | 6.03 |
| 2 | Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA | 4.36 |
| 3 | Charleston-North Charleston-Summerville, SC | 2.25 |
| 4 | Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach-Deerfield Beach, FL | 2.15 |
| 5 | Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL | 2.09 |
| 6 | West Palm Beach-Boca Raton-Boynton Beach, FL | 1.99 |
| 7 | Fort Worth-Arlington, TX | 1.97 |
| 8 | Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, CA | 1.92 |
| 9 | Las Vegas-Paradise, NV | 1.88 |
| 10 | Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL | 1.87 |
| Housing Demand Weakest in Northeast and Midwest | ||
| # | U.S. Metropolitan Area | Metro Movers Index |
| 1 | Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV | 0.37 |
| 2 | Chicago-Joliet-Naperville, IL | 0.41 |
| 3 | Boston-Quincy, MA | 0.44 |
| 4 | Salt Lake City, UT | 0.44 |
| 5 | Louisville-Jefferson County, KY-IN | 0.45 |
| 6 | St. Louis, MO-IL | 0.46 |
| 7 | New Haven-Milford, CT | 0.47 |
| 8 | Little Rock-North Little Rock-Conway, AR | 0.47 |
| 9 | Kansas City, MO-KS | 0.47 |
| 10 | New York-White Plains-Wayne, NY-NJ | 0.49 |
New Yorkers and Chicagoans Bounded for Sunbelt States
Here’s some good news to the home sellers in the South by Southwest region of the country. Contrary to what you might think, it’s not just a seasonal dream for fun in the sun that’s drawing house hunters from the Northeast and Midwest. In fact, nearly all the top longer-distance homes searches from NYC and Chicago at the end of the summer were to major metros in the South and Southwest. But what’s even more interesting to note is that these searches rarely crossed paths.
New Yorkers preferred homes along the Atlantic coast of Florida, including Miami, West Palm Beach and Fort Lauderdale.

| # | Top Longer-Distance Outbound Searches From NYC |
| 1 | Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale, CA |
| 2 | Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall, FL |
| 3 | Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL |
| 4 | Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA |
| 5 | West Palm Beach-Boca Raton-Boynton Beach, FL |
| 6 | Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach-Deerfield Beach, FL |
| 7 | Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL |
| 8 | Chicago-Joliet-Naperville, IL |
| 9 | San Francisco-San Mateo-Redwood City, CA |
| 10 | Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill, NC-SC |
Meanwhile, Chicagoans have a thing for Florida metros along the Gulf Coast in Tampa and Cape Coral as well as metro areas in Texas, Arizona and Nevada.

| # | Top Longer-Distance Outbound Searches From Chicago |
| 1 | Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, AZ |
| 2 | Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale, CA |
| 3 | New York-White Plains-Wayne, NY-NJ |
| 4 | Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL |
| 5 | Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA |
| 6 | Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL |
| 7 | Dallas-Plano-Irving, TX |
| 8 | Houston-Sugarland-Baytown, TX |
| 9 | Las Vegas-Paradise, NV |
| 10 | Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL |
To check out the full report, click through the SlideShare deck below.
Most house hunters want to fly the coop with 59% looking to leave their metro area.
As Dorothy once famously said while clicking her ruby red slippers, “there’s no place like home.” If there’s any truth to that statement, then why do people move away? Well, one of the top reasons is because of a house. According to the good old U.S. Census, more than 4 in 10 people moved between 2009 and 2010 for a real estate-related reason, such as upgrading to a bigger and better house. Beyond that, people also move for love (this includes getting married and breaking up) and work (we all got to bring home the bacon somehow, right?).
Given this, you would think that most people aren’t looking for a fresh start when they move, just a change of scenery. Surprisingly, that isn’t the case. When we dug into how far people want to move – by examining where people searching for a home on Trulia.com are today and where they’re looking to live tomorrow – we found that 2 out of 3 (59%) house hunters want to pack up and get out of dodge.
So now you’re probably wondering how far is “far” when people say they want to move far, far away? Well, check out this pie chart we made using the data from our study to find out (it is best viewed counter-clockwise).

Slice #1: Long distance moves (more than 500 miles) make up 23% of all the searches, which means that nearly a fourth of all the house hunters out there are looking for a pretty drastic change…as in goodbye San Francisco and hello New York City!
Slice #2: Regional long distance moves (less than 500, more than 100) aren’t nearly as dramatic, but are still a pretty big change, which is what 17% of house hunters are looking to do. If you’re familiar with the difference between NorCal and SoCal, it’s all California but practically two different worlds…as different as Mark Zuckerburg and Kim Kardashian.
Slice #3: Moving to a nearby city (less than 100 miles, different metro) is kind of like a local move but not. Imagine living and working in San Francisco – you’re just a walk or bus ride away from pretty much everything you’ll ever need and want, but you have a very tiny living space (on average, homes go for about $522 per square foot). Should you then move away to the suburbs in Pleasanton (a town on the outskirts of the SF Bay Area) and keep your job in the city, you’ll likely have more house than you know what to do with (we’re talking about an average $317 per square foot) along with a draining commute and a can-not-go-anywhere-without-a-car way of life. Be it for a bigger house or something else, about 19% of house hunters are looking to make this kind of move.
Slice #4: On the flip side, 41% of house hunters are lifers (someone who voluntarily lives and dies in the same place that they were born) or at least they seem like they’re going to be.
Question to all our wonderful readers: how far away did you go the last time you moved? Tell us in the comments below!
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