
"A right-now home isn't about settling. It's strategic. It's about choosing a property that fits your life, today, knowing you can adjust later as your needs evolve. In many ways, your home is no longer your identity, it's an accessory to your lifestyle."
"Instead of asking, "Will this be my last home?" they're asking, "Will this move put me in a better position three to five years from now?" Data supports this shift. According to the National Association of Realtors, the median homeowner tenure in the United States is approximately 10 years, reinforcing the idea that most buyers are already making multiple moves over the course of their lifetime rather than staying in one home forever."
"What the market is experiencing now, especially here in Las Vegas, is a shift away from permanence and toward practicality. Buyers aren't chasing perfection anymore. They're choosing the "right-now home.""
"Mortgage rates, home prices and inflation have forced buyers to become more payment-focused than ever. When monthly costs matter more, flexibility naturally becomes the priority."
Homeownership expectations have moved away from permanence toward practicality. Buyers increasingly choose a “right-now home” that matches their current life rather than seeking perfection that will last 20 to 30 years. The home is treated less as a lifelong identity and more as an accessory to lifestyle. Buyers now think in phases, focusing on whether a move improves their position in three to five years instead of asking if it will be their last home. Data shows median homeowner tenure is about 10 years, supporting multiple moves over a lifetime. Financial pressures from mortgage rates, home prices, and inflation also make flexibility more important as monthly costs drive decisions.
Read at Las Vegas Review-Journal
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