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November 26, 2017

Buying a Vacation Home is About Putting Down Roots, Not Making an Investment Decision

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL (US Edition), MANSION GLOBAL (by ANNE MACHALINSKI)

excerpted from : The Wall Street Journal (US Edition), Mansion Global

There are several U.S. vacation destinations that high-net-worth individuals flock to every summer, including the Hamptons on the tip of Long Island, New York; Nantucket, Massachusetts; Aspen, Colorado; and Lake Tahoe, which straddles Nevada and California.

Increasingly, many of these locations are also popular during the winter, whether that’s for skiing somewhere like Jackson Hole, Wyoming, going to the beach in Hawaii, or relaxing during the off season in Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

While many families rent a single-family home for vacation, paying $10,000 or more per week during the peak season, every year some will decide to put down roots and purchase a property. Depending on the location, these vacation homes—often the third or fourth property in a buyer’s portfolio—start at around $5 million and go up to well beyond $40 million.

What often spurs that purchase decision is a desire to create a family retreat that can be used for generations—not some calculated plan related to wealth appreciation or buy-to-let investment potential, experts say.

“Vacation home purchases aren’t about rental income or obtaining an appreciating asset,” said Brittanie Rockhill, an Aspen-based broker with Douglas Elliman, “but are about the non-monetary factors, such as not having to pack or manage logistics when you travel.”

These buyers want to say, “let’s go have some family time this weekend,” and be off to their home at a moment’s notice, she continued. “Time is always their most important resource.”

In addition to purchasing a vacation property as a family retreat that they can visit any time they want, picking a destination where they might live for a significant part of every year after retirement is another factor that pushes potential buyers to purchase that vacation home rather than go on renting.

Regardless of the market, most vacation home buyers need to put in some time to find the location that’s right for them, whether that’s a town, a neighborhood or a resort community. If they haven’t already been visiting a vacation destination for many years, this could take several seasons, experts say.

“Even if you love an area,” said Tom Evans, an associate broker at Jackson Hole Sotheby’s International Realty, “it’s always best to rent first and make sure you know exactly where you’re moving.”

In the Hamptons, Corcoran Group broker Peter Huffine said he often helps buyers select their target locations based on where their primary residence is.

In the Cape Cod region of Massachusetts, where there are homes in more than a dozen waterfront towns, such as Provincetown, Chatham, Hyannis and Falmouth, as well as totally separate markets in the nearby islands of Nantucket (considered beachier and more laid back) and Martha’s Vineyard (woodsier and more presidential), local brokers say most clients know where they want to be before they decide to  buy.

When it comes to the island communities, “either you love Nantucket or you love the Vineyard,” said Steve DiFrancesco, CEO and Principal Broker at Hunter, Reed and Company in Nantucket. Mr. DiFrancesco, who serves as President of the Nantucket Association of Real Estate Brokers (NAREB), says that in years of owning a home on Nantucket, he’s only been to the Vineyard — just 30 miles across Nantucket Sound — once.

“If you’re relatively new to Nantucket, and you haven’t been coming here for generations, renting gives you a great chance to try out different areas of the Island” said Mr. DiFrancesco, noting that a home Nantucket worth $10-12 million will easily rent for $25,000 to $30,000 per week during the Summer.

On Hawaii’s Big Island, where Harold Clarke, the owner and principal broker of Luxury Big Island by Harold Clarke, said high net worth individuals are increasingly drawn to raw beauty and undeveloped natural setting that’s more difficult to find on other islands like Kauai and Oahu, buyers must decide what resort of the handful of options they feel most comfortable in.

Once they’ve settled on the location and type of property they desire, Mr. Clarke said that Big Island buyers make a purchase right away. “These buyers want the comfort of being able to jump on the plane and just have their house ready to go—not worry about a rental,” he said, noting that those rental properties can cost up to $10,000 per night.

But in other markets, waiting for the right home to come to the market can take some time—specifically if the buyer is looking for the most in-demand waterfront locations, as is often the case, or a move-in-ready masterpiece at the right price.

Because most of these buyers pay in cash for their vacation home and only use financing if it makes sense from a tax standpoint, some wait for a liquidity event, like selling their business or cashing out some stock options, to make their purchase, said Mr. DiFrancesco in Nantucket.

Others carefully time their buy to take advantage of tax incentives they might reap with an upcoming retirement.

For instance, in Jackson Hole, many buyers decide to buy a year or two before they retire so they can take advantage of the “great tax climate,” Mr. Evans said.

“In Wyoming, there’s no state income tax, no corporate income tax, no capital gains taxes on stock portfolios, and we’re one of a half-dozen states where you can set up a dynasty trust,” he continued. “If you want to protect what you’ve gained and earned in your life, moving here is a good option.”

There’s also no transfer tax when you purchase a home, said Jake Kilgrow, an associate broker at Jackson Hole Sotheby’s International Realty, whereas in other destinations where people come to ski in the winter and relax outdoors in the summer, such as Telluride or Aspen, that tax is 3% of the purchase price. And property taxes are quite low compared to New York or California.

Nevada, like Wyoming, also has some of these tax incentives, said David Gemme, a Lake Tahoe-based associate broker at Oliver Luxury Real Estate, which is why many retirement-age buyers tend to congregate to Nevada side, rather than the California side, of the area.

And once they’ve purchased their dream home, most of these high-net-worth buyers skip renting it out, and rather pay for a property manager to take care of it when they’re not there, so that they can visit at any point they want, even at the last minute.

However, if they do decide to rent their homes out, many of these areas have robust markets in which owners can pay for their annual carrying costs, including maintenance fees, property taxes and insurance, in a month or two, and enjoy their home for the other 10 months of the year, Mr. DiFrancesco said.

In Aspen, owners often prefer weekly rentals, said Ms. Rockhill, often because they don’t want to give up their property for a whole month.

Another factor potential Aspen property owners should consider is that rents fluctuate wildly from month to month, dipping precipitously in the off-season, and then rising on holiday weekends, when most people want to use their property themselves. This dynamic also exists in many of the other seasonal markets, where there’s little demand outside of a short peak season.

READ THE FULL WALL STREET JOURNAL MANSION ARTICLE HERE