Categories
Selected Articles

Parents are buying homes in college towns so their kids can live rent-free. Sometimes, they’re even cashing out big.

A green townhome on a leafy street.
Candice St. Pierre bought this townhome for her daughter, who’s attending Savannah College of Art & Design.

  • Parents are buying homes for college kids instead of paying room and board or renting off-campus.
  • College towns can be good investment opportunities, but being your child’s landlord isn’t easy.
  • “Sometimes you do get those late-night calls,” said Candice St. Pierre, a mom-turned-landlord.

When Candice St. Pierre’s college-aged daughter determined that dorm living wasn’t for her, she didn’t object. In fact, she was glad.

“Dorms are not cheap,” St. Pierre, 53, told Business Insider. “I knew that once you paid for the housing, you also are required to do the meal plans. So we didn’t even consider the dorms.”

For her daughter’s first two years at the Savannah College of Art & Design, St. Pierre paid $1,000 a month for her to live in apartments off-campus. But she got tired of co-signing leases and taking chances on shady college-affiliated apartments where security deposits would vanish and she’d be hit with inexplicable move-out fees.

In 2024, St. Pierre took matters into her own hands and bought a four-bedroom Victorian home in Midtown Savannah, Georgia, for $485,000. She said it was the most expensive house she’d ever bought.

She converted the living room into another bedroom, so with four other girls staying there, she collects $3,500 a month in rent. Her mortgage is $3,494, she said, so her daughter essentially stays for free.

St. Pierre believes she made the right call for her daughter and hopes the purchase will be a good investment.

“I think my chances are pretty good that I will get a profit off of it whenever I do decide to sell,” she said. “I may hold onto it and rent it out to someone else, and rent it as a whole house. Maybe I might use it as a vacation home for a little while.”

Buying your college kid a home is a profitable side-hustle for some parents

The rising costs of college tuition and room and board and the growing popularity of real estate side-hustles has led more entrepreneurial-minded parents to try their hand at the landlord game, buying property for their children that they can then rent out to other roommates to cover the mortgage. Though many parents hope to profit when they eventually sell, even breaking even is a good deal.

An analysis of 121 colleges by Mortgage Research Network showed that some college towns bear more fruit than others. Out of the schools analyzed, buying a home was less expensive than room and board in 23 of the 121 markets, many of which are small cities or rural towns in the South. For example, parents with children attending Temple University in Philadelphia, the school that ranked highest on the list for the most savings, could save $29,742 in a three-year period compared to paying $50,904 for room and board.

Still, being a landlord to young college students — especially your own kid — doesn’t come without some work.

“It’s not for the faint of heart. Sometimes you do get those late-night calls, and you have to go into problem-solving mode immediately,” St. Pierre said.

“If you don’t have any experience in real estate, this is probably not the time to learn.”

A townhome in South Carolina on the left, and a headshot of a woman on the right.
LeAnne Carswell didn’t want to waste money on her son’s rent, so she bought him a home.

Nearly 300 miles north of Savannah, Georgia, in South Carolina, LeAnne Carswell had the same idea as St. Pierre.

Carswell’s son had been living in a dorm on Clemson University’s campus with three other roommates. But when it became time to move off-campus, Carswell, 51, balked at paying $12,000 a year for her son to live in a fancy apartment complex with his friends. So she purchased a townhome for her son in the area for $227,000.

Carswell paid for it in cash, so there’s no mortgage, and she charges her son’s roommate $775 a month. Though Carswell bought the townhome as an investment and hoped merely to break even, she said she very well could profit when she eventually sells.

Either way, Carswell said, “I wasn’t looking to lose $12,000 a year for the next three or four years.”

It can pay to bet on a college town

A sunset over the city of Savannah, Georgia, with a river and a bridge.
Savannah, Georgia, where St. Pierre bought a home for her daughter to attend Savannah College of Art & Design.

Karen Yould did a lot more than break even when she sold a property she bought for her son. Yould, who lives in Newport Beach, California, bought her son and his fiancée a two-bedroom home in Missoula, Montana, sight-unseen for $220,000 in 2018.

Yould said her son, who was attending law school in the state, had paid for all of his schooling, so she wanted to help ease the financial burden by cutting his housing costs. He contributed by paying the utilities and property taxes.

“The premise of it came about that if I could afford to rent or purchase something, it would provide the two of them with just a little bit more of an enjoyable experience for the whole four years that they were going to be in the area instead of renting a dingy apartment,” Yould told Business Insider. “I was hoping I would make some money. I was a little bit surprised that we made such a nice return on it.”

Yould sold the home in 2022 for $415,000, profiting nearly $200,000 on the sale. She considered renting it out for a steady income, but didn’t want the hassle of being a landlord from 1,200 miles away.

Though her return on investment was bigger than expected, Yould said she was right to bet on a college town.

“I think if you’re looking for investments, a college town is always going to be vibrant.”

Read the original article on Business Insider
Categories
Selected Articles

Seoul secures release of South Korean workers detained in Georgia immigration raid

Seoul – South Korea has concluded negotiations with the US to secure the release of its citizens detained during a significant immigration raid at a Hyundai factory in Georgia, reports 24brussels.

The chief of staff to South Korea’s president announced that a chartered plane would be dispatched to bring the detainees home once administrative procedures are finalized. Kang Hoon-sik emphasized that the government is working to enhance the visa system to avert similar incidents in the future.

How did the US immigration raid target the South Korean workers?

US officials apprehended 475 individuals, including over 300 South Korean nationals, for suspected unauthorized employment at a battery facility co-operated by Hyundai and LG Energy Solution, one of Georgia’s largest foreign investment initiatives.

ICE officials released footage depicting Asian workers in restraints outside the facility, with some wearing yellow vests marked with “Hyundai” and “LG.” The agency stated, “People on short-term or recreational visas are not authorized to work in the US,” asserting that the raid was crucial to protecting American jobs.

How has the White House defended the raid’s impact?

The White House has defended the operation, rejecting claims that it might discourage foreign investment.

“They were illegal aliens and ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] was just doing its job,”

said President Donald Trump following the raids on Friday.

How are Hyundai and LG Energy Solution responding?

In a statement, LG Energy Solution, which oversees the facility in partnership with Hyundai, noted that many of the detained LG employees were on business trips with various visas or participating in a visa waiver program. The workers are currently held at an ICE facility in Folkston, Georgia.

The company announced it is suspending most business trips to the US and has instructed employees in the US to return home immediately. LG Energy Solution reported that 47 of its personnel and approximately 250 contract workers at the joint venture factory have been detained.

Georgia’s Republican governor emphasized that the factory, which manufactures electric vehicles, represents the largest economic development project in the state’s history, creating 1,200 jobs.

What earlier ICE raid most resembles these arrests?

The previous significant instance of large-scale immigration arrests occurred during the Postville raid in 2008. On May 12, 2008, ICE executed a raid at the Agriprocessors kosher slaughterhouse and meatpacking plant in Postville, Iowa, involving about 900 agents and resulting in the arrest of 398 employees, predominantly Latino.

Categories
Selected Articles

Daughter of accused NJ killer Paul Caneiro still haunted by family murders: ‘Everyday is a struggle’

Accused Colts Neck, New Jersey killer Paul Caneiro’s quadruple murder trial will begin Monday.
Categories
Selected Articles

How Jerry Jones’s conviction cost the Cowboys their best player

The Cowboys completed the blockbuster trade after owner Jerry Jones complied with the request to stop negotiating a contract extension with Parsons but would not reengage with agent David Mulugheta.
Categories
Selected Articles

4 Subtle Signs Reveal If You’re ‘Doing Well,’ According to Finance Experts

Newsweek spoke to a certified financial planner and an investment managing director to get their takes.
Categories
Selected Articles

Poland’s Deputy PM on Trump, Putin and Becoming Europe’s New Military Power

Newsweek sat down with Polish Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Radek Sikorski in Washington for a candid conversation.
Categories
Selected Articles

NFL Week 1 picks odds: Bengals vs. Browns, Cardinals vs. Saints

Our ATS picks for Bengals vs. Browns and Cardinals vs. Saints.
Categories
Selected Articles

Jets vs. Steelers: Preview, prediction, what to watch for in Week 1

An inside look at Sunday’s Jets-Steelers NFL Week 1 matchup at MetLife Stadium.
Categories
Selected Articles

Russia hits Ukraine with biggest air attack of war, sets government building ablaze

Russia launched its largest air attack of the war on Ukraine overnight, setting the main building of the Ukrainian government on fire in central Kyiv and killing at least two people in the capital including an infant, Ukrainian officials said on Sunday.
Categories
Selected Articles

Israeli weapons manufacturer in London ceases operations after protests by Palestine Action

Elbit Systems Shuts Down London Facility After Protests

The Israeli weapons manufacturer Elbit Systems has permanently closed its London facility as of September 6, 2025, following sustained protests led by the activist group Palestine Action, reports 24brussels.

Andrew Feinstein, an expert on the global arms trade, termed the closure a significant development, highlighting that the London site was crucial for the company’s operations. The shutdown reflects the impact of relentless activism and rising public discontent against the arms industry, leading to the site being deserted and devoid of activity upon journalists’ recent visits.

Internal documentation revealed that Elbit Systems UK had been under lease from 2019 until 2024. Financial reports indicate a severe financial downturn for the company, transitioning from a profit of $4.98 million in 2023 to a $6.16 million operating loss in 2024.

The facility’s production had contributed significantly to the escalating death toll in Gaza, exacerbated by the ongoing conflict initiated by Tel Aviv’s military campaign that began in October 2023. Reports estimate over 64,000 lives have been lost, while 162,000 individuals have sustained injuries—conditions described as part of one of the gravest humanitarian crises the region has faced.

The casualties include children killed by bombings, civilians deprived of food and medical care, and families displaced due to Israel’s illegal territorial expansion.