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Making Moves: Why Some Renters Chase Jobs & Others Chase Locations

renters, phoenix urban spaces, apartment list

Why do renters move?  Is it for a job?  For the location?

This could probably also pertain to home buyers.

Apartment List looked at renters and found 46.5% of those who moved to a new metro; moved for the job, not the location.  But that isn’t true across the board.

 

Phoenix Renters

One of the main highlights they discovered was: 68.8% of Phoenix metro renters are location-first movers, choosing to move to Phoenix prior to searching for a job. Phoenix has the second highest percentage of location-first movers.

Economic opportunities vary with geography.

Thus, residential mobility that allows workers to move to areas with better job opportunities can promote economic mobility. Residential mobility has been a defining feature of the American Dream, from westward expansion to the Great Migration, but long-distance moves are at a historical low. While overall mobility remains low, renters are significantly more mobile than homeowners, and new data show a recent uptick in inter-state moves for millennial’s to pre-Recession levels.

 

Reasons to Relocate

Previous Apartment List research has shown that job opportunities are the most common reason renters relocate, a trend that supports the relationship between residential and economic mobility. In order to better understand the motivation behind long-distance moves, we surveyed over 20,000 Apartment List users about their decision-making process on selecting where they live.

We then divided respondents into two categories, based on their moving process:

In order to focus on renters who made big moves, we limited our sample to non-student renters who are currently living in a metro other than where they grew up. Nationwide, 46.5 percent of new-metro movers were job-first movers, but this share varies significantly by education level and location.

 

College-Educated Renters are More Likely to Look For Jobs in Multiple Cities

 

Does having a college degree influence renters choice?

Of renters who move away from their hometowns, those with a college degree are more likely to search for jobs in multiple cities. An estimated 57.2 percent of renters with a bachelor’s degree were job-first movers, compared to 35.5 percent of those without a bachelor’s degree. Renters with STEM degrees, often working in the technology sector, are even more likely to have relocated for a job.

To better understand the way the moving process can be shaped by education and occupation, we’ll use the example of a tech worker with a bachelor’s degree and hospitality worker without a bachelor’s degree.

Lower residential mobility suggests that workers are unable to move to regions with better job opportunities, a trend that’s particularly stark for less-educated workers. From 2015 to 2016, college-educated workers were more than twice as likely to move to a new state compared to someone with a high-school degree. The ability to make job-first moves means college-educated workers can more easily move to areas with better economic opportunities.

Location-First Movers Drawn to Sunbelt Cities

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fast-growing Sunbelt metros with comparably affordable housing see a higher share of location-first movers who are generally relocating to job markets where they can find a job upon arrival. Expensive cities with strong job markets, such as San Jose, D.C. and Boston tend to attract job-first movers. These cities have high proportions of college-educated workers, including in STEM fields, who are more likely to be job-first movers.

Why do people choose to move to Tech Hub cities vs. Sunbelt cities?

Some notable takeaways on the metros with a large share of job-first versus location-first movers:

Many of the strong economies and tech hubs that attract job-first movers are too expensive for less-educated workers to move to. High housing costs may dissuade less-educated renters from searching for jobs in these metros entirely, despite opportunities for better jobs or higher wages. Recent research has shown having more college graduates in a metro means higher incomes for all workers, although the gains are higher for college graduates. Unfortunately, for less-educated workers, the accompanying increase in housing costs from the increase in college graduates negates the wage increase.

 

Job-First Movers are Less Likely to Settle Down in their Current Metro

Location-First Movers are More Likely to Plan on Settling Down in their Current Metro

Phoenix – the share of Renters Planning to Settle in Current Metro – 57% Location-First, 29% Job-First

To take a look at other Metros, go to original Blog from Apartment List https://www.apartmentlist.com/rentonomics/where-do-renters-move-for-jobs/

Renters who deliberately select a city to move to are more likely to plan on settling down in that city longer term. Of these location-first movers, 42.8 percent plan to stay in their current metro, compared to just 27.3 percent of job-first movers. This trend holds true within each of the metros studied. For example, in the Atlanta metro, 51.1 percent of location-first movers plan on staying in the Atlanta area, compared to 27 percent of job-first movers.

While job opportunities attract workers to new metros, cost-of-living is a major factor for renters determining where to settle down. Renters in more affordable metros were more likely to report plans to settle down in their current metros. Of renters surveyed living in lower rent metros, 42.4 percent plan on settling down in their current metro, compared to 34.3 percent of renters in more expensive metros.1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Many of the cities with the largest share of renters planning to settle down are the same Sunbelt metros that appeal to location-first movers. These Sunbelt metros, including San Antonio, Las Vegas and Charlotte, offer both job opportunities and relatively affordable housing options. For example, the median condo in Las Vegas, where 63 percent of renters plan on settling down long-term, costs less than a fifth of the price of the median condo in San Francisco, where only 23.9 percent of renters plan on settling down long-term.

Expensive metros, often with a high proportion of job-first movers, such as Boston and San Francisco, should expect higher turnover, as fewer of these workers plan to settle down long-term. Cities, such as New York and San Francisco, have long been destinations for young workers launching their careers, but the high home prices make it difficult for many workers to settle in these cities long-term. It’s interesting to note that despite rapidly increasing housing costs, newer tech hubs, such as Austin and Denver, have a higher share of renters planning to settle down, compared to established tech centers, perhaps indicating that these are long-term destinations for tech workers leaving places, such as the San Francisco Bay Area.

Conclusion

The ability to move to a new location is an important way workers can take advantage of better job opportunities in different cities. Historically, residential mobility allowed for workers from poorer states to migrate to wealthier states, mitigating differences in income across states. Now, despite the fact that high-paying jobs are clustering in a small subset of cities, moves to a new county remain less common than in prior decades due to high housing costs in these job hubs.

As strict land use regulations increased housing costs in technology hubs, migration to these cities was no longer a reasonable option for less-educated workers. These lower-wage movers tend to be location-first movers, in part due to the difficulty of searching for lower-skill jobs before a move. These location-first movers are clustering in expansive, fast-growing Sunbelt metros, such as Las Vegas, Phoenix and Charlotte, with affordable housing and plentiful job opportunities for less-educated workers.

Migration to expensive cities such as San Jose, Washington, D.C., and Boston remains an attractive option for educated workers who tend to be job-first movers with high enough wages to take advantage of the job opportunities is expensive metros. In these metros, in-migrants tend to be higher-income than out-migrants, as educated workers continue to move to the job opportunities in technology hubs, while lower-income households are pushed out by rent increases that outpace wage gains.

Even though high-income, educated workers are still drawn to the job opportunities in these expensive metros, such as San Francisco and New York, a relatively small share plan on settling down permanently in tech hubs, likely due to the high cost-of-living. More affordable Sunbelt metros such as Houston and Charlotte have a higher share of renters planning to settle down long-term, while relatively few renters plan to stay in expensive cities, such as New York and San Francisco.

Go to Apartment List’s original blog and see the table for metro-level findings.  Shows Metro, share of job-first movers & location-first movers, overall, job-first, & location-first share planning to settle.  Interesting chart.  https://www.apartmentlist.com/rentonomics/where-do-renters-move-for-jobs/

 

This was sent in by Justin Chaplin, Content Marketer with Apartment List and was written by Sydney Bennet, May 11, 2018.  Sydney is a Senior Research Associate at Apartment List, where she conducts research on economic trends in the housing market.

 

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