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Leaving Florida for a Home in Los Angeles. What Could These Retirees Afford?

Leaving Florida for a Home in Los Angeles. What Could These Retirees Afford?
Leaving Florida for a Home in Los Angeles. What Could These Retirees Afford?


Alice Vickers is a sixth-generation Floridian who has spent most of her life in Gainesville and Tallahassee. Florida is where she and her husband, John Davis, raised their two children and built careers as lawyers. But a few years ago, the state’s increasingly fractious politics — not to mention the humidity and the bugs — convinced them it was time to leave.

At the time, they were living in a four-bedroom brick cottage in central Tallahassee. Their twins had grown up and left the state, and a short time later Mr. Davis’s parents passed away.

He and Ms. Vickers, both 66, had always liked the scenic West, and briefly considered moving to Seattle or Boulder, Colo. But their daughter lived in Los Angeles, and they loved visiting her. Mr. Davis, a cyclist, was drawn to the mountains there. And the couple hoped their son, who had worked in San Francisco and now lives in Dallas, might someday return to the West Coast.

They connected with Brita Kleingartner, a Los Angeles real estate agent who had helped them buy the East Hollywood home where their daughter lives. “They really wanted to put their own touch on something,” Ms. Kleingartner said, adding that Ms. Vickers and Mr. Davis weren’t “your typical retirement people — they were very much wanting to be in the mix.”

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Last spring, the couple sold their Tallahassee home for $810,000, giving them enough cash to buy their next place. In September, they drove out to Los Angeles with their dog Boosie and a budget of around $1 million. They were in search of a house of up to 2,000 square feet, ideally with a fenced yard for Boosie and enough space to host their son and other guests. It had to be move-in ready, but with the potential to be remodeled, and they didn’t want anything that had been cheaply flipped.

“So many of the houses, they do get that flip,” Mr. Davis said. “They all look alike. We wanted a house we could do the renovation on.”

The ideal neighborhood would be walkable, with restaurants and bars. But when Ms. Vickers and Mr. Davis arrived in Los Angeles, they found its sprawl and size daunting. “We had no idea of any parts of it and where we would want to live,” Ms. Vickers said.

When they discovered the undulating landscapes and mountain views in the northeastern part of the city, they were smitten. “You think of L.A. as being flat,” she said. “So when we started seeing these views, we were kind of like, ‘Wow, this is so different from Florida.’”

But the Los Angeles market was low on inventory. “I told them that it was probably going to take them three months, if they were very serious and actively looking,” Ms. Kleingartner said.

Among the properties they considered:

Find out what happened next by answering these two questions:

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