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(from Zillow Data Analyst Andy Krause, September 11, 2014, read much more HERE)
Nationally, waterfront homes are worth more than double of the value of homes overall.
The most expensive waterfront homes are in Hawaii, California and the coast of the Long Island Sound. The least expensive waterfront homes are in Florida and the Midwest.
The largest waterfront premiums are generally found in Florida and along the Great Lakes.
Nationwide, the premium paid for waterfront homes has increased over time, although it has fallen since the housing market peaked in 2007.
As the saying goes, they just don’t make waterfront property anymore. As a result, water frontage is very likely to boost a home’s value to some degree relative to non-waterfront homes. But this waterfront premium varies across the country, and it can be difficult to put a precise number on how much more home buyers end up paying for waterfront properties.
Using Zillow’s database of more than 100 million homes nationwide, we have analyzed the single-family waterfront home market in the United States from 1996 to the present and have a developed a unique home value index for waterfront homes, nationally and the city-level. Waterfront homes are defined as those properties located on an ocean or lakes with a total combined size of 10 square kilometers (3.8 square miles) of surface area or greater. As a reference, Lake Sammamish in the Seattle metropolitan area is roughly 8 square miles in size.
We examine a number of market trends. First, we look at the nationwide difference in waterfront single-family homes versus all single-family home values over time. We then break waterfront trends down to the city level and explore where waterfront homes are most expensive and where the premium relative to non-waterfront homes is the greatest.
Two decades ago, the median value of waterfront properties was 64 percent more than the median value of all homes. Today, the difference has grown to 116 percent: Waterfront homes are now worth more than twice that of all homes, as illustrated in the figure below.
Overall, the changes in value between waterfront and all homes show similar trends over time, with the values of waterfront homes being more exaggerated (both up and down) than the entire collection of single-family homes nationwide. At the peak of the single-family housing bubble in March 2007, the premium for waterfront homes over all homes reached 143 percent. Since then, the premium for waterfront homes has fallen: To 126 percent in February 2012 and to 116 percent as of the most recent analysis.[1] From the peak of the single-family home housing bubble to the trough in February 2012, waterfront homes lost slightly more value (-26 percent) than did all homes (-22 percent). They have also recovered less quickly from the trough to the present: Since the trough, waterfront home values are up 8 percent, while overall home values have increased 13 percent.
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