Originally Posted by
easyrdr
My parents bought their cabin on the lake in northern Michigan in the 80's. Paid around $225k for it. That was a lot of money then. They bought it because it was next door to the 5 generation family cabin. Prices steadily climbed over the years. By the early 2000's lake affordability started to go to shit. You could still find deals every so often but they were much harder to come by. My wife and I bought on the lake in 2012, we paid $690k for the house, our property taxes when we bought it was $7000/year. The difference was it wasn't a vacation home for us it was our primary residence. We were one of 4 households on our road that were locals, the rest were second home owners. From 2012 on shit got nuts, then COVID hit and it got worse. The cidiots came in droves and prices went through the roof. The house we bought in 2012 for $690k sold in 2022 for $3.5. The guy that owns it now pays 60K in property taxes per year. While it would appear we won the lottery I can say there is nothing fun about being priced out of your home. We were working harder and harder just to cover the taxes. Add in two kids off to college and a third one headed that direction and it no longer made sense to try. We sold it, made it two years with no lake and had a full family freak out, so went back to the drawing board in search of the affordable lake house, which has landed us in Northern Wisconsin. They got a fuck ton of lakes and a fuck ton of cheap cabins. Not sure about the rest as I haven't spent a whole lot of time there but we bought a nice little cabin on a lake in the woods, just closed on it a few weeks ago. Going to rent it a bunch to get it paid down using it when we can, as we get more time there rent it less and less with the goal of not renting it at all. There are still affordable places and ways to make it happen, just a lot more work and effort than it used to be.