From the Category: For-Sale

SC Coastal Area Beachfront Real Estate

Real estate for sale coastal beachfront of South Carolina is very abundant and varying in scope and type. The most common comes as no surprise are condos (aka single-family attached homes) as those of us in the real estate industry call them. The reason condos & villas (just another word for condo really), are so popular is obvious. Developers and builders can make more money on a smaller piece of dirt by building up with increased density.

The “Pee Dee” region of South Carolina is typically known in South Carolina to mean the upper coastal area of South Carolina from Georgetown north to the border of North Carolina including Conway, Florence, Little River, and a few other inland towns.

Understanding the different regions and real estate markets before purchasing a home or real estate in coastal South Carolina is key, so I will do my best to help you know the differences & risks of certain areas and types of properties and how they differ.

 

Myrtle Beach is the most popular city in the “Pee Dee” region of South Carolina that most people around the world will understandably recognize. As such there are thousands of real estate listings there because it’s the largest city in the area by population and size. It is also one of the biggest tourist destinations in the United States by tourist volume. Usually only second or third behind Orlando FL and/or New York maybe. Beachfront homes for sale in Myrtle Beach SC consist primarily of high-rise condominiums on the ocean, some low & midrise condos (usually older properties), and obviously single-family detached homes.

 

North Myrtle Beach is very similar in feel and offering to that of Myrtle Beach, but as the name implies it is simply more north. The only positive thing about North Myrtle is that with it being more north it is further away from the “hot spot” commercial busy areas of Myrtle Beach so the traffic is slightly less hectic. Most of the beachfront homes for sale in North Myrtle Beach are going to be the same as in Myrtle Beach. So if you want a little less traffic and a slightly slower pace but want to be close enough to drive into the “goings on” of Myrtle then buy here.

 

Surfside Beach is just further south than Myrtle Beach and similar to North Myrtle Surfside will be a just slightly slower lifestyle pace than living in the middle heart of Myrtle Beach and have a little less traffic. Surfside Beach is a smaller town so they have a lot less oceanfront condos to choose from but a decent amount of beachfront houses in Surfside Beach SC can readily be found. 

 

 

Garden City SC is even further south than Surfside and as you can already guess the further you get out from Myrtle Beach the less busy and “trafficy” it is. So when choosing wherein the upper coastal market of South Carolina you want to live this is a must to decide if you want to be in the heart of the hustle and bustle or away from it. Oceanfront homes for sale in Garden City SC will be mostly detached homes as there are only a few condo developments on the beach as compared to the other cities and towns of the coastal real estate market of the Pee Dee region.

 

Murrells Inlet SC even further south is just after Garden City and the beach there is not very long so there aren’t a vast quantity of homes on the oceanfront for sale here. Most of them will be marsh and creek waterfront because a large inlet (hence the name) offers buyers the option homes with deep water docks.

 

Pawley’s Island is the last of the Pee Dee areas that have most real estate demand. Pawley’s Island SC beachfront homes will mostly be in one of two resort communities: Litchfield By the Sea & Debordieu Colony which technically is in Georgetown. These two well-known golf vacation resort neighborhoods offer a quiet family-friendly setting on the beach, with golf, tennis, and other family-oriented activities. Also, like much of the entire South Carolina coast there are waterfront and creekfront properties here as well. Pawley’s Island also offers a less busy slower environment as it too is much further removed from Myrtle Beach, and is designed for quiet family fun vs “partying”. Probably the closest Charleston SC feel you’ll find in this MLS region.


 

Further South – Charleston SC Region

 

Charleston SC is known as the Low-Country of coastal SC, also has an abundance of beachfront homes for sale in SC, however, there are much less beachfront condos as compared to the northern beach communities of the Pee Dee region. Charleston SC oceanfront communities below.

 

Isle of Palms

 

Sullivan’s Island

 

Folly Beach (known as “the Myrtle Beach of Charleston”)

 

Kiawah Island

 

Seabrook Island

 

Edisto Island

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Charleston SC Real Estate Affordability Out of Reach For Most

As a real estate broker in Charleston SC it is my job to track real estate sales trends so I can fully understand what the market is doing and thus educate my clients to make an informed decision about their transactions. Knowing how the market and economic conditions effect property sales is a key factor to being a great agent, and more importantly how affordable homes are to the prospective buyers. After the real estate crash that started in 2008 which led to “The Great Recession”, things just haven’t been the same. Sure the economy has rebounded considerably against what it was, jobs have come back somewhat, and real estate prices have improved but that’s all on the surface. Real estate sales is the largest indicator in America as to the health of the economy.

 

According to Realtor.orgIn spite of higher prices, housing affordability is down only slightly from a year ago as lower mortgage rates and higher incomes almost offset higher home prices. 

 

Housing affordability declined slightly (2.6 percent), from a year ago in November in spite of a notable increase in prices. The median sales price for a single family home sold in November in the US was $221,600, up 6.6 percent from a year ago. This pushed the affordability index from 171.9 to 167.4.

 

Market Stats – Price Averages


However what you might not hear a lot about is the “affordability index”. The Housing Affordability Index measures whether or not a typical family earns enough income to qualify for a mortgage loan on a typical home at the national and regional levels based on the most recent price and income data. The metropolitan index shows the existing single-family home affordability index over the past three years, by metropolitan area (in my instance Charleston SC). Median price of Existing Single-Family Home Sales: comes from the existing home sales monthly survey conducted by the National Association of Realtors®. To interpret the indices, a value of 100 means that a family with the median income has exactly enough income to qualify for a mortgage on a median-priced home. An index above 100 signifies that family earning the median income has more than enough income to qualify for a mortgage loan on a median-priced home, assuming a 20 percent down payment. For example, a composite HAI of 120.0 means a family earning the median family income has 120% of the income necessary to qualify for a conventional loan covering 80 percent of a median-priced existing single-family home. An increase in the HAI, then, shows that this family is more able to afford the median priced home. Blah Blah Blah – I know all this probably sounds like mumbo jumbo to most people.

 

The simplest way to understand this is the average income in your area (defined by gathered data by expert analysts) of a family / divided by average (median) price of a house in any given area. (Assuming 20% down on a purchase)

 

According to 2010 US Census Bureau data Charleston’s median family income is $61,525 which is higher than the United States average. Median home price for a single family house in the Charleston SC tri-county area is just over $251,000.

 

So where am I going with all this you ask?  My real estate websites rank among some of the best in the entire state of S.C. for real estate searches and I track the analytical data. What I have seen is there is A LOT, and I mean A LOT of interest in living here in the Charleston area. However, most can’t afford to live here. I see thousands of people per week search homes in the area, I talk to a few prospects a week and come to realize living here is out of the grasp for most. Especially for those who dream of being anywhere “near” water or the beach. Fortune magazine just wrote an article and said Trulia Housing Economist Ralph McLaughlin ranked Charleston SC #2 for best most interesting housing markets in the country. The beginning of the article notes the “first” top ten which include larger metropolitan cities like San Diego, Charlotte NC, and New Orleans, but then goes on to explain how Charleston SC and Grand Rapids Michigan end up also making the list: “This underscores the growing problem of affordability in many cities where jobs are plentiful. At a certain point the affordability problem grows so bad that people are forced to leave the cities with the best job prospects and move to a place where they can afford to buy a home”. 

 

He is referencing most can’t afford to live in cities like San Diego, so they choose cities like Charleston SC instead, but it’s my contention that most can’t afford here either, and I have proof because I see it all the time. The most viewed pages on my sites are regularly homes under $100,000, and the next most view pages is homes $200k – $300k. It’s not like we don’t have homes here in that price range, but what you’ll get for your money is not what people want to live in. In a recent article by The Post & Courier about this topic they reference a retail store on King St that struggled to find employees to work there simply because of parking costs. There are even instances where restaurants downtown are being forced to close because they can’t find servers to work, because what’s called “work force” staff can’t afford to live downtown. This is becoming a huge issue throughout downtown and Mount Pleasant, “work force” employees can’t find affordable housing on the income they make so many businesses struggle finding employees. Businesses known for hiring low-skill workers like retail, restaurants, cleaning & maintenance, etc have to come in from over 40 mins to hour drive to work one way. Developers aren’t helping themselves, because as more and more hotels are built to cash in on the popularity of Charleston’s tourism prosperity this uses up available “dirt” real estate that could otherwise be developed for housing. Thus, driving up the cost of long term housing such as apartments, condos, housing developments. 

 

Then you’ll have those who think they want a second home, and thus I get thousands of visitors looking at homes on Kiawah Island, because they have done a week visit to the famed golf resort, but they too fall off. In my opinion it’s because they too realize it’s out of the affordability range for even those who can afford a vacation home. Small one bedroom condos on the beach communities go from $250k – $350+ for beachfront. 

 

24/7 Wall Street – 

Of the eight metropolitan areas in South Carolina, the Charleston area is the most expensive. The average cost of goods and services is 5.5% higher in Charleston than it is across the state. Renters in particular pay significantly more in South Carolina’s most expensive city than they do across the state. While the average renter in Charleston paid 94.6% of the average renter’s expenses across the country, the average renter in South Carolina paid just 76.3% of what the average renter paid nationwide. Rentals are gauged in terms of “doors”, and bedrooms. 

 

Based on per capita income Mount Pleasant SC is #1 the most expensive in the state. The average cost for a “bedroom” in Mt Pleasant is almost $700, whereas in Columbia SC you can rent an entire 2 or 3 bedroom apartment for $700. 

 

In short, Charleston SC isn’t as affordable as one might think because they lump us into the misconceived perception of “South Carolina”, when in fact Charleston is far from being like anywhere in the state. 

 

 

Real Truth About Online Real Estate Listings

We’ve all seen the Zillow & Realtor.com commercials with the couple home searching on their tablet or pc looking at maps and school data all to make you feel warm and fuzzy. However, how accurate is that laptop-house-for-sale-sign-300x287data and how truthful are they being? I hate to be the barer of bad news, but it’s all just smoke and mirrors. Really, trust me. I know because I am not only a full time real estate broker, but also a full time web marketing and development consultant. I did an article last year about how truly inaccurate Zillow really is and most aggregators of RETs IDX data more times than not are inaccurate at best.

Recently, I have gotten even more annoyed with their more current campaigns claiming to have the “most up to date” listings. Their commercials are always bragging about how their listings are pulled
directly from the MLS every 15 mins some every 30 mins, so it’s the “most accurate” and “up to date” listings. All the while trying to convince the consumer user to use their sites vs others boombecause others just aren’t as accurate and somehow have stale listings. This couldn’t be further from the truth, and is borderline false. Let me explain.

 

This website you’re looking at for example is literally as if you’re looking at my local MLS board’s property listings and just as if I were to log into my MLS platform from the real estate board. As you look through homes in my website here, search around with queries, you are looking at the most current properties on my local Charleston South Carolina MLS. Those properties are coming into my websites via an IDX (Internet Data eXchange) feed directly from our MLS here in Charleston SC (CTAR) realtor board and our board only refreshes their server’s data twice a day, or once every 12 hours. Although Trulia, Zillow, Redfin, and Realtor.com and even other agent websites with vendor provided services tout 15 or 30 minute refreshes, it’s really just hogwash. Their servers might really refresh their database that often, but unless the board is also doing that (which they aren’t), then everyone, every realtor, every real estate agent with property listings, every real estate website has the same exact information (assuming their servers are grabbing at least twice a day as well).

 

I talked to the CEO of one of the nation’s best RETS IDX WordPress Plugin vendors: “typically we only set that rate for boards with lot of users because of the additional load it puts on server, the thing is, most of our [MLS] boards update twice a day because that is all the board itself updates and some boards restrict when we can pull data to early morning hours anyway. So basically they [Zillow, Realtor, Redfin other Vendor services for Realtors] have a loop that pulls the data and it takes about 30 minutes to run through that loop however, that data may not be updated but twice a day. It’s been my experience that most MLS boards around the country work in the same way. Primarily it’s a technology limitation thing. No matter what they want you to believe”.  For them to make that claim that they (unlike others) have the most fresh listings simply is false. It’s as fresh as anyone else’s.

 

The MLS board has the power over Zillow as pointed out by Inman.com. Furthermore, it’s my contention and most Realtors in the know, argue that going through your local agent will ALWAYS be the best place for anything pertaining to real estate vs a tech company that is simply their trying to grab the users contact information and sell it to real estate agents. Zillow, Trulia, and Realtor.com are not real estate companies at all, they are just web technology businesses.

 

In short, Do your local agents a favor and stop using them. 

Being A Good Real Estate Clients Is Just As Important

I know most of you probably feel that as agents we are there to work for you, and I don’t disagree, but with all business being easy to deal with goes both ways and benefits both parties involved. Real estate is no different. You know old saying “Do unto others as you would want done to you”? That’s what buyer and seller clients need to think about while working with their agent, however all too often that is not the case. Many buyers and sellers do not consider that the agent also has a life, a family, OTHER clients than just them, and so on. Recently I received this letter (ABOVE) from a prospect I showed property to:

I did not cash this check, but you can bet I will keep in touch with this client because at some point there is a good chance they will likely consider purchasing in the future, and I will go out of MY way to take care of them. Simply because it’s my job, but ALSO because they were SOO considerate as to mail me $100 check and say THANK YOU. As the letter states it’s not customary or necessary for them to do this, and it made my day, but it definitely makes me want to work that much harder for these people than those who think I am there to jump through hoops for them.

Furthermore, I have many wonderful clients that have been thoughtful of my time, easy to work with, respectful of my professional advice and thus I make it my point to work that much harder for these types of clients. It doesn’t matter what kind of industry you are in, being considerate and kind as the business owner, AS WELL AS the customer is just as important to ensuring you will get the absolute best service and best deal possible. Customers and clients who make sure to be thoughtful and kind to the people they work for without question get a much better experience than those who do not.

True story:

I once had people call me to see property last minute (although it's customary to require at least 24 hrs) and I jumped through hoops to get two properties set up then drove over to the first address which was 25 mins away only to have no one there to meet me. This is rare, but it does happen.

As Realtors we understand that not all listings or showings will result in a closed transaction with a nice commission, and the good agents gladly accept this fact. That’s ok, but if you ask a real estate agent to take time out of their life, or their other client’s attention then all we ask is to be courteous, punctual and appreciative.

In all kinds of business not just real estate being thankful, understanding and appreciative goes a very long way. The next time your real estate transaction is difficult and not enjoyable you might want to look in the mirror because it is quite possible you were the reason.

 

A Realtor Will ALWAYS Be Best Place For Most Accurate Information

I write this with a little trepidation because I must admit as an agent I have used in the past, some of the tools that Zillow created, such as their older widgets and APIs. However, I think it’s time the public understands what exactly the major real estate listing aggregators (being: Zillow & Realtor.com) a.k.a. syndicators are really up to and why you as a user should take what they have to say with a grain of salt.

 

I am a licensed real estate broker in Charleston South Carolina (since 2005), and I once founded and owned a flourishing mortgage company for 9+ years to which I knew hundreds of real estate agents. So it’s not like I don’t know what I am talking about when I say real estate agents (most specifically Realtors) will ALWAYS be your BEST and MOST accurate place for reliable factual data about sales, listings, and the like. Assuming they are good, intelligent ones.

 

Let me explain. Zillow, Trulia, Movoto, & Realtor.com are not a real estate companies, nor are they in the business of selling real estate so what sense does it make to take their information as fact? They are tech companies, that make their profits by selling agents ad space and leads they derive directly from the listings we as agents put on MLS.

 

What’s so bad about this is that they take advantage of the fact that most agents don’t have the deep pockets they do to compete with them in the online real estate search market. That’s not the worst part, as many have found out the information they distribute to the public a lot of the time is incorrect, and inaccurate at best.  Zillow is notorious for publishing outdated properties that are no longer on the market. I have had prospective clients call me and ask about a property only for me to tell them that home isn’t for sale. They say to me, “but, I saw it on Zillow”.  I regularly receive inquires from prospective buyers who’ve seen this or that property for sale on Zillow or Trulia. When I look it up I find that the property is in escrow (under contract), or was recently sold, or was sold literally years earlier. 

 

Not to mention that the sales data, sales trends, and graphs they show are on average 20% off from the actual market which ONLY agents have access to. Sure they are pulling in sold homes data, and listings data then using some algorithm to regurgitate it back out in the form of a graph or stats, but there are other market factors that they can’t take into account because they don’t have actual MLS and local market intel your agent would be analyzing. The MLS listings published by the syndicators are mixed in with inaccurate and unreliable data that the syndicators gather from other sources. As a result, the reputations of Realtors and the Realtor Multiple Listing Services are compromised. What’s the MLS? Essentially it is just a communications portal for agents and brokers to share listings, details, and data about properties owners have employed the help of agents to market and sell.

 

In closing, ONLY your local agent can provide you with the MOST reliable and accurate understanding of the market and how to negotiate your home’s sale price, and or your offer price. If you’re going to use aggregator websites like Zillow, Trulia, or Realtor.com, use them as a nice, pretty way of looking at homes only… THEN call an agent (Realtor) for the facts.