Sunday, December 18, 2011

How the Housing Market in Chicagoland Affects Seniors

It has been a familiar route for so many homeowners over the years: build equity in the property where you lived for so many years, then sell it for a handsome profit so you can move into that lovely retirement community you had your eye on for so long.

But what if the family homestead does not sell?

Without deep pockets to otherwise fund the right to take up occupancy in that senior lifestyle home, the average senior homeowner cannot make that move.

A high-profile case in point is The Clare at Water Tower, a seniors-only project that launched in 2008. It has unfortunately been forced to file bankruptcy recently, due to lagging sales. The folks who have already moved into the complex will be able to continue in residence, although they will apparently have many empty units around them while waiting for yet more buyers to step up and move in.
It is partly an issue of being able to sell the family home, but likely it is also a matter of having to let go of all that loss in equity in the family home. Any home can be sold in this market (Chicagoland), as long as it is priced according to what the buyers are willing to pay for it. Nonetheless, it is hard to swallow such large equity losses, when the seniors reflect on what their home was worth some 2, 3, 4, or 5 years ago.
It makes the decision a bit harder, perhaps, but it can be done.








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