Folks just need to try and live below their means. This may not be practical for everyone, obviously.
I bought a town house condo right before I turned 25, worth roughly 2x my salary at the time. By age 31, I had paid it off entirely: a 15 year mortgage, done 8 years ahead of schedule.
Could I have done better if I invested that money? Probably. But I like being debt free. I also invested a ton anyway.
I know people who bought homes at similar times who have refinanced every 3 years and now owe way more than they started with. They don't care about debt. They continue to spend more than they make, year after year, live pay check to pay check despite their high salaries...
This is part of what the graphic is trying to demonstrate: there is a significant and material difference in trying to purchase a home between your market, and the one I'm in.
if you can find a well paying / interesting job in your field in the area where real estate is "cheap" - go for it!
in my field most interesting (!) and well paying jobs are concentrated in major metropolis areas around major university hubs ... where real estate costs are some of the highest in the country.
I bought a town house condo right before I turned 25, worth roughly 2x my salary at the time. By age 31, I had paid it off entirely: a 15 year mortgage, done 8 years ahead of schedule.
Could I have done better if I invested that money? Probably. But I like being debt free. I also invested a ton anyway.