Owning real estate in hurricane prone regions of the country has always had it’s risks. So after a particularly bad stretch of storms over the past few years one would expect the population to decline.
And it has, by about 1 percent since 2000.
Of course, according to the study by USA Today, the regions hardest hit by Katrina are the ones which have lost the greatest population. That is obvious as they are still rebuilding nearly 3 years later.
What is interesting is how the housing slowdown has played into this. For Has the housing slowdown affected those trying to move to Florida from the north? I think so.
First selling a home in the upper Midwest and northeast has been tough. Add to that the falling housing prices in Florida. This combination has not rushed potential buyers to make that buying decision.
So will this trend continue? I doubt it.
The lure of coastal living is too strong to the human spirit. Once housing prices stabilize and the market regains it’s equilibrium, I think the trend of buyers to the coast will continue as strongly as it has before the series of storms and the housing slowdown. Hurricanes be damned.
The number of people who live in coastal areas that are most vulnerable to wind and water has fallen slightly since 2000, reversing a boom that brought tens of thousands of homes and high-rises to low-lying regions from Texas to Georgia, a USA TODAY analysis shows.
About 2.1 million people live full-time in those areas, down less than 1% over the past eight years.
That doesn’t mean Americans are thinking twice about living in vulnerable spots, says Robert Hartwig, president of the Insurance Information Institute. Instead, he says, the slowdown is more likely a result of a housing market crunch that’s left some homes vacant — and others half-built — in once fast-growing parts of the South. USATODAY.com
No related posts.


{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }
I can't imagine people that really want to live by the water letting a little hurricane keeping them away.
Better to live in tornado country, where you get killed without warning. No more hurricane evacuation anxieties.
Cannibal
Man I disagree. I grew up on the ocean and now live in a tornado prone region. I will take a hurricane in an instant over tornadoes.
The real estate market is showing signs of improvement. The sales are up and the inventory is still high. These are good signs of a strong buyers market. Please email with any questions. Thanks. Aaron Pugh
I too would take a hurricane over a tornado any day. With a hurricane you generally have several days warning with a tornado you are lucky to get more than 15-20mins warning.
hurricane, tornado and any other disaster are issue. they prefer to live in a safe place than those in risky places