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Mike & Stephanie Stomberg Deefield, Illinois
With South Florida's real estate market
booming, many buyers have chosen to bypass the sunshine state for
other, more exotic locales. Tropical islands like the nearby
Bahamas offer beautiful ocean views but with more of a laid-back
vacation feeling than in the United States, for less money and
best of all without the property taxes.
Like many couples searching for a vacation home, Mike Stomberg,
CEO of a Chicago-based pharmaceutical consulting business, and
his wife Stephanie, an attorney, looked at property in South
Florida. "But the real estate prices had just gone nuts and we
couldn't get the same house that we could get in the
Bahamas…and frankly, we wouldn't want to." said Mike, who
was hooked after spending a weekend on Grand Bahama Island.
"It's a different feel than Florida-it's a little more laid back
and that's what we liked about it," said Mike, who wanted to a
vacation home far away from the hectic, fast-paced lifestyle in
the United States. "The ocean is bluer there, and beaches are
beautiful. My wife and I work really hard, so when we get away we
really want to get away and you definitely feel like that in the
Bahamas."
The Stombergs decided on a four bedroom, ocean-front home in the
Shoreline community on Grand Bahamas Island. The new community
caters to a growing homebuyer market with 10 neo-traditional
styles and prices ranging from $680,000 to more than $2.5 million
for 2,800 to 4,500 square-feet of ocean-front property-prices
that Florida's real estate market can't even touch.
Mike said he and his wife, along with their eight-year-old son
enjoyed the convenience of the community, and that the seven
swimming pools and "quick walk down the beach to grab a bite to
eat" were big selling points for the family.
"Grand Bahama is very close to the states. We can hop right down
there from Chicago and the community is in a perfect location
with the Lucaya airport right there," said Mike. "The
infrastructure was also really important to us, services such as
high-speed internet access are a necessity because my wife and I
both have jobs where we need to stay in-touch."
The Stombergs decision to purchase a vacation home just outside
of the United States is indicative of a real estate shift for
second home buyers, according to demographers who say that most
Baby Boomers feel they can negotiate a better deal outside of the
U.S.
"And modern communications and transportations make it that much
easier to stay in touch or catch a last-minute flight to enjoy a
long weekend at the beach," said Steve Jervis, owner and
president of Shoreline, a 26-acre master-planned gated community
on Grand Bahama Island.
Studies show Shoreline has tapped a hot and emerging market. U.S.
sales of second and vacation homes surged to 2.82 million
properties in 2004, up 16.3 percent from the year prior, noted
the National Association of Realtors (NAR). Vacation homes
accounted for 13 percent of all homes purchased.
Although the laid-back and friendly Bahamian lifestyle might have
been the final selling point for their new vacation home, the
Stombergs said the tax-break was also hard to resist. Tax freedom
is an often-overlooked benefit in the coastal real estate
market.
"For people from places like Florida, where property tax rates
have skyrocketed, this tax-free environment is becoming an
increasingly attractive area to purchase coastal real estate,"
said Jervis.
That translates to an extra $20,000 of pocket money on a million
dollar home, which can be a big savings.
"The tax situation certainly had an impact," said Mike. "But most
importantly was the lifestyle-the look and feel and the people on
the island. When we get away to the Bahamas it's always a
different feeling and that's what we wanted."
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