Questions Адвокат [Hot] Single men and women 2025

[Hot] Single men and women 2025

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JaneSingle спросил 2 недели назад

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Article about single men and women:
Here s what they re doing differently. Single women accounted for nearly 20 percent of home purchases in 2019, and that number is only continuing to grow. Single women own more homes than single men.
 
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Here’s what they’re doing differently. Single women accounted for nearly 20 percent of home purchases in 2019, and that number is only continuing to grow. A new report from LendingTree, which culled data from the Census Bureau, found that single women own more than 1.5 million more homes than single men do in America’s 50 largest metro areas. AJ_Watt / Getty Images. For years Sarah Wilson, a personal finance expert and author at the financial website Budget Girl, has dreamed of owning her own home. Now, she’s seeing that dream through, shopping for a duplex in the Bryan-College Station area of Texas. I’m a 31-year-old single woman who is about to purchase a duplex on my own as both a personal residence and a place to rent out as an additional form of income,” Wilson says. “I have a large down payment saved and plan to use the rental income to pay the mortgage and eventually buy more properties. ” Wilson isn’t well off, nor is she getting a loan with a co-signer or a guarantor. She’s single, makes $45,000 a year and “still lives frugally” after paying off $33,000 in student loan debt. She’s doing this completely on her own as an investment in her independence and financial security. “I have saved aggressively for a home because my whole adult life I’ve been hearing about the wage gap and how women are at a disadvantage, and it made me want to take care of myself financially,” Wilson says. “In a world where I know and have seen how hard it is to be a woman, I feel a need to make sure that I will never be in a vulnerable situation if I can control it. That means budgeting, saving, investing and building my own personal wealth.” The target-date fund: A better way to invest for retirement. Single women own more homes in big cities than single men. Beatrice de Jong, a Los Angeles-based Realtor and consumer trends expert at the home-selling site Opendoor, is noticing more career-minded single women in the market to buy a home. “More and more single women have been buying homes, and I expect to see this continue in 2020,” de Jong says. “Women are more career-focused now than previous generations, and we want to be smart with our money and make an investment that sets ourselves up for the future, rather than relying on marriage or waiting for a man to provide the life we want.” Keosha Burns, vice president of public relations at Chase Home Lending, adds that “across the country, we are seeing women take the housing market by storm.” “According to the National Association of Realtors, single women accounted for nearly 20 percent of home purchases in 2019, and that number is only continuing to grow. Over the last several decades, we have observed that women are excelling in their careers, getting married and having children later and are determined and driven to reach their goals — qualities that can breed success when it comes to home buying.” A new report from LendingTree, which culled data from the Census Bureau, found that single women own more than 1.5 million more homes than single men do in America’s 50 largest metro areas. Cities with the highest ratios of single female home owners are Tampa, Florida (where single women own 16.4 percent of households and single men own 11.5 percent), New Orleans (16.1 percent versus 10.9 percent) and Buffalo, New York (16.1 to 10.2 percent). Although some cities tout more single women owners than others, the data demonstrate that in all of the 50 largest metropolitan areas surveyed, single women own more homes than single men do, making for a kind of reverse gender gap. Divorce plays a role, but only to an extent. The obvious question here is how do women, who still earn less than men on average, manage to own more property than single men? One fairly unexciting reason (at least from the perspective of women’s advancement) is that in divorces between men and women, the woman is more likely to get the family home over her ex-husband. “Historically in divorce women take the house, and that is still primarily true,” says Nicole Middendorf, a financial adviser and certified divorce financial analyst.

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