#co-buying

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SF real estate
fromwww.businessinsider.com
21 hours ago

I started buying properties with family and friends in my 20s. I've bought 10 total, and one has made over $400k on Airbnb.

Co-buying properties with friends and family can accelerate homeownership and investment opportunities.
fromCurbed
2 months ago

I Want to Buy a Brownstone With My Best Friend

My best friend and I have been talking about buying a two-family house and living in it together. We're both in our late 30s and have wanted to buy for a while, but everything is out of our range as solo buyers - so going for it together seems like the ideal (and only) way to get out of the rental market in New York City.
New York City
Real estate
fromBusiness Insider
4 months ago

I bought a home with my best friend and we run it as an Airbnb. Co-investing in real estate has its pros and cons.

Co-owning a home with a friend via an LLC reduces financial risk, shares expenses and management, can generate rental income, but requires compromises on decisions.
fromTime Out New York
4 months ago

Co-buying an apartment might become a thing in NYC in 2026

This shift is more than a workaround for mortgage rates. StreetEasy's report found that 56% of prospective buyers are planning to purchase with a co-buyer. Out of that number, 9% will team up with friends and 6% with relatives. That "third way" of co-ownership-neither solo nor coupled-is about to help reshape how homes are bought and how life is lived in NYC's tight market.
Real estate
Real estate
fromwww.npr.org
6 months ago

Why friends are teaming up to buy homes

Home prices increased 56% since February 2020, driven by excess buyer demand, limited supply, rising construction costs, and high mortgage rates that discourage homeowner moves.
Real estate
fromwww.bbc.com
9 months ago

Is buying with friends the answer to a tough housing market?

Co-buying property among friends is emerging as a practical solution to high housing prices in London.
fromFortune
9 months ago

Gen Z is copying baby boomers with communal living-but this time, it's because they can't afford a house on their own

Today, Gen Z and millennials are increasingly turning to co-buying homes with friends or family—not for countercultural reasons, but as a practical response to high housing prices.
Real estate
fromBusiness Insider
9 months ago

I bought a house with my best friend. We turned it into an Airbnb and have made more than $60,000 in 3 years.

"Luckily, a friend of mine, Wade, was looking for an investment property in 2021. We decided to join forces to co-purchase a home."
Real estate
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