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Home » News » Business

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Parents buying homes for kids at college

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Purchasing to save on costly campus housing

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  • Ashley Jordan, who studies art history at the University of Maryland, examines one of her paintings in the living room of the two-bedroom condominium she shares with her brother Kyle in College Park. Ashley's parents bought the condo for the children to provide them housing and to avoid paying expensive on-campus housing fees. (Astrid Riecken/The Washington Times)
  • Kyle Jordan, a sophomore at the University of Maryland, cooks dinner in the condo he shares with his sister. "In today's economy, it literally costs less to buy this condo than put them on campus," said their father, Troy. "We save money now. We potentially make money later. They're in a better environment. There's all upside, no downside to this." (Katie Falkenberg/The Washington Times)
  • Andrew Riguzzi is a Realtor who specializes in helping college students buy homes in Washington. Mr. Riguzzi said he sells as many as eight college homes a year to students attending Georgetown and George Washington universities. (Allison Shelley/The Washington Times)
  • Mr. Pohlen owns and lives in this house in Grand Rapids, Mich. His growing real estate empire is assessed at $1.3 million. (Michael Shead/Special to The Washington Times)
  • Grand Valley State University students (from left) Beth Tenney, 21, Joe Pohlen, 22, and Derek Williams, 21, carve jack-o'-lanterns in a house owned by Mr. Pohlen. Mr. Pohlen invests in real estate and rents out the properties to college students. He owns 10 houses. (Michael Shead/Special to The Washington Times)

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By Tim Devaney THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Ashley Jordan has lived with her college roommate for most of her life, so not much changed when she moved into a College Park condo with her brother Kyle last fall — except their housing costs got a whole lot cheaper.

Miss Jordan's parents bought a $185,000 condo where the siblings could live while they attend the University of Maryland. They decided it was the financially smart thing to do.

"In today's economy, it literally costs less to buy this condo than put them on campus," said their father, Troy. "We save money now. We potentially make money later. They're in a better environment. There's all upside, no downside to this."

The Jordans are one of a growing number of families across the nation who are buying homes for their children to cope with the ever-climbing costs of a college education.

Rather than pay rent, some families collect it. And after graduation, many sell the home and make a profit, said P.L. "Skip" Singleton Jr., a D.C. Realtor.

"If you're paying rent, you know it's going out the door, all of it, every dollar is out the door," said Mr. Singleton, who works for DC Living Real Estate.

Basic math is what pushes many students and parents into buying college real estate.

In the District, it's increasingly difficult for students to find on-campus housing because dormitory space is limited, said Kimberly James, an agent with Long & Foster. Some schools, such as the University of Maryland at College Park, limit the number of upperclassmen who can live on campus.

Even if on-campus housing is available, dorm rooms aren't exactly cheap. At four-year public colleges, the average annual cost for room and board jumped 5.4 percent to $8,193 this school year, according to a recent College Board survey. At some private schools in the District, students can pay nearly $50,000 to live on campus for four years.

The result is a college housing system that encourages large numbers of students to live off campus. As the housing market began to bottom out last summer, leaving some cities with houses that cost less than cars, students who used to rent rooms in group homes began to buy their own at bargain-basement prices and manage them for profit, real estate agents said.

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