Fortune | FORTUNE 11小时前
Gen Z is copying baby boomers with communal living—but this time, it’s because they can’t afford a house on their own
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文章探讨了共享居住在Z世代和千禧一代中的复兴,与20世纪60年代的嬉皮公社有所不同,现在的共享居住更多是出于经济原因。由于住房成本飙升、抵押贷款利率高企以及学生贷款债务等因素,年轻人开始通过合买房屋、与家人朋友合住或在父母房产上建造附属住宅单元(ADU)来降低住房成本。专家预测,这种趋势将持续下去,成为一种常态化的住房解决方案。

🏡 共享居住的兴起:文章指出,共享居住在Z世代和千禧一代中越来越普遍,与50至60年前的嬉皮公社有所不同,如今的共享居住更多是出于经济原因。

💰 经济驱动因素:高房价、高抵押贷款利率以及学生贷款债务是推动年轻人选择共享居住的主要因素。例如,根据全美房地产经纪人协会的数据,要负担一套房价中位数为42.2万美元的房屋,美国人需要达到六位数的收入。

🤝 共享方式多样化:共享居住的方式多种多样,包括与朋友或家人合买房屋(co-buying)、与兄弟姐妹合住、与同事合住,甚至在父母的房产上建造附属住宅单元(ADU)。

📈 趋势持续发展:专家预测,由于经济因素,共享居住不太可能成为一个短暂的实验,而更有可能成为一种永久的、常态化的住房选择。与1970年代在经济好转后消退的嬉皮公社不同,如今的共享居住植根于严峻的经济现实。

It was also a lower-cost living option. Communes—largely influenced by the hippie movement, a rejection of mainstream culture based on peace, love, freedom, and individualism—pooled resources for rent, food, and utilities, driving costs down, according to a 1970 article by The New York Times. Houses were shared among several people, pushing down rent costs and eliminating the need for separate appliances, utilities, and other living expenses. 

Hippie commune from the 1960s.

Getty Images—Carl Iwasaki

Communal living was popular 50 to 60 years ago. Now, we’re witnessing a resurgence of communal living, which has become increasingly common among Gen Z—but for very different reasons. 

According to a recent report by the National Mortgage Insurance Corporation, nearly one-third of Gen Zers said they’re open to pooling funds and purchasing a home with friends or family, a practice known as co-buying; 18% of millennials said the same. A 2024 OpenDoor report also said more than three in four first-time homebuyers purchased their house with parents, siblings, friends, romantic partners, and even colleagues. 

This isn’t just a would-be trend. Realtors and other housing experts told Fortune they’re already seeing this movement show up in their own housing markets. 

TikTok and Instagram are also filled with videos of Gen Z and millennials who have bought homes together.

Communal living across the U.S.

Patti Cooper, a Fairfield County, Conn.-based real-estate agent for Coldwell Banker, told Fortune the co-buying trend is becoming increasingly popular in her housing market since housing prices have skyrocketed since the pandemic. Mortgage rates are still nearly 7%, and Americans need to make six figures to afford a median-priced home, which is currently more than $422,000, according to the National Association of Realtors (NAR).

Parents have sold their homes and combined their income with their children to buy single-family homes with separate in-law apartments, she said. While it can work out nicely, younger generations still want their own space. 

“Siblings are also buying houses together because of the rising cost of rents. It’s more affordable,” she added. “The other reason is that student loan debt makes it harder to qualify for a mortgage by yourself.”

Elena Novak, a lead real-estate researcher and analyst at Property Checker based in Massachusetts, also told Fortune more Gen Z and millennial buyers have been “banding together” to buy homes in the past two years. 

“At first, it was two siblings or close college friends pooling savings to snag a condo that neither could afford alone,” Novak said. “Now I’m seeing triads of coworkers or even small house shares of four people on the hunt.”

“The uptick is unmistakable compared to just five years ago,” she continued, “when co-buying was essentially nonexistent outside of married couples.”

Another common co-living option for Gen Zers, according to Bar Zakheim, CEO of Better Place Design and Build, is to build accessory dwelling units (ADUs) on their parents properties. 

“The math just doesn’t add up, especially where we are in San Diego with some of the highest housing costs in the country,” Zakheim told Fortune. Co-buying or building an ADU “allows them to find a housing solution for themselves at a fraction of the cost of buying a home.”

And while we may not have something exactly like the hippie movement again, we can expect the trend of Gen Z and millennial co-buying to continue, experts say. 

“Unlike the counterculture communal living experiments of the 1970s—which blossomed alongside a broader cultural shift and then faded as the economy strengthened—today’s co-buying is rooted in hard economics,” Novak said. Signs like high home prices and mortgage rates “points to co-buying being more than a fleeting experiment. It’s likely to become a permanent, normalized path to ownership.”

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共享居住 Z世代 千禧一代 住房成本 合买房屋
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