$1M dwellings a dime a dozen In 2004, 3,225 recorded in Maine, most in Cumberland County

loading...
NEW YORK – Everything about Frank Fazio’s new two-bedroom apartment on Manhattan’s Upper West Side is decidedly average, including its price: a hair under $1 million. With five rooms and about 1,050 square feet of space, the place is a nice size by New York…
Sign in or Subscribe to view this content.

NEW YORK – Everything about Frank Fazio’s new two-bedroom apartment on Manhattan’s Upper West Side is decidedly average, including its price: a hair under $1 million.

With five rooms and about 1,050 square feet of space, the place is a nice size by New York standards, but it is no mansion. There are no chandeliers, no soaring cathedral ceilings and no doormen downstairs to help with groceries.

“There is nothing that would make you say, ‘Wow this place must have cost a million bucks,'” said Fazio, 42, a banker who relocated from Chicago.

Yet pay a million he did, something more Americans are doing these days.

For the first time, there are more than 1 million owner-occupied homes in the United States worth $1 million or more, according to a Census Bureau survey published late last month.

Once a symbol of unusual wealth, million-dollar dwellings now seem like a dime a dozen in some places. San Francisco alone has more than 20,000 of them. There are another 46,000 or so in Orange County, Calif. Maine even has a few thousand of them.

In Manhattan, even someone with a million dollars in their pocket can’t buy luxury. The average price for an apartment in all but Harlem and the borough’s northern tip climbed above $1.2 million in the second quarter of 2005, said Gregory Heym, chief economist for Terra Holdings, an owner of real estate brokerages in the city.

“For a million dollars, you couldn’t get a two-bedroom on the East Side,” Heym said.

The surge in high-end prices has happened quickly. The Census Bureau’s 2004 American Community Survey found 1,034,386 homes worth at least $1 million in 2004, compared to 595,441 in 2002 and only 394,878 in 2000.

Demand for housing is still outstripping supply in many U.S. markets, said John M. Clapp, a professor of finance and real estate at the University of Connecticut. Low interest rates have made it easier for people to afford more house, as have some new financing methods, like interest-only adjustable mortgages, which initially allow buyers to lower their monthly payments.

In Maine, long-time residents hoping to move up in the real estate market bolstered home sales and prices in August over levels from the same month a year earlier, the Maine Association of Realtors said Tuesday. Median prices for single-family homes in Maine rose last month to $195,000, while sales rose by 6.3 percent.

U.S. Census Bureau figures show that Maine had 3,225 million-dollar homes in 2004, with the biggest share of them in Cumberland County. A year earlier, Maine ranked No. 15 nationally by percentage of homes worth at least $1 million, according to census figures.

Even in land-rich cities like Phoenix, the demand for housing in mature neighborhoods has outstripped supply.

In a few exclusive communities, $1 million won’t buy you more than “an acre of dirt,” said Kristy Ryan, a broker at Re/Max Fine Properties in Scottsdale.


Have feedback? Want to know more? Send us ideas for follow-up stories.

comments for this post are closed

By continuing to use this site, you give your consent to our use of cookies for analytics, personalization and ads. Learn more.