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Updated 8 months ago on . Most recent reply

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Graham Huber
  • Investor
  • Philadelphia
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How is the philadelphia real estate market?

Graham Huber
  • Investor
  • Philadelphia
Posted

How is the current real estate market in Philadelphia? Are home prices trending up or down, and is it a good time to buy or invest? Also, how competitive is the market for first-time homebuyers and investors right now? Any insights or recent experiences would be appreciated!

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Stuart Udis
#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing Contributor
  • Attorney
  • Philadelphia
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Stuart Udis
#2 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing Contributor
  • Attorney
  • Philadelphia
Replied

@Graham Huber Philadelphia is a city if neighborhoods. Some are fairing better than others but I am optimistic about the overall city outlook because the fundamentals are strong. Excellent Ed's and Med's, international airport, port city, close proximity to NYC and DC. City government under new Mayor administration is already showing signs of improvement over past administration which is encouraging as well. 

Some neighborhoods such as Fishtown, Northern Liberties and the surrounding areas are struggling with absorption because of an influx of new housing that was built over the course of the past few years. That may take a few years to settle itself, but that's not a neighborhood fundamentals issue and will correct itself naturally, especially as more neighborhood commercial and amenities continue to infill to meet the new population. I invest exclusively in NW Philadelphia, primarily Mount Airy (19119 zip) and have faired well in recent years. The neighborhood definitely is one of the more challenging to understand with more nuance than most Philly neighborhoods but those who understand the neighborhood have also faired well. 

 I would avoid the North Philadelphia and SW Philadelphia neighborhoods. They may seem attractive on a spreadsheet if you are chasing cash flow, but the fundamentals are not as strong and these properties are  disproportionately impacted by capex and operating costs. This will hold true in any lower cost inventory neighborhood, not a Philadelphia specific problem but resist the temptation particularly if you are not a local hands own operator. Very few succeed with this model and those who do are the contractor types who are driving around in their work truck putting out fires all day. Not a business I care to be in. 

  • Stuart Udis
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