‘It Wasn't Paradise': The Surprising Downsides of Living in a Beach House
'It was a goal I'd cherished for years,' she says.
She paid $420,000 for a three-bedroom, three-bath house a short stroll from the Pacific Ocean on Oxnard Shores in Ventura, CA.
The contemporary 2,839-square-foot home came with a three-floor deck from which she could gaze at rosy-hued sunsets over sparkling waves.
'It was everything I thought I wanted,' she recalls.
But all too soon, her beach house dream started showing its ugly underbelly.
Countless people dream of buying a house near the beach, and pay a premium for it: Realtor.com® data shows that homes on the ocean are priced roughly 29% higher than landlocked homes in the same area. While some of this markup is due to differences in home size (beach homes tend to be larger), on a per-square-foot basis, beachfront listings are still priced on average 15% higher.
Yet, although people pay dearly for the privilege of seeing and hearing those crashing waves outside their window, beachfront properties come with a surprising array of pitfalls.
'They come when the weather is beautiful and think, 'Oh, my gosh, this is the place!'' says Laura Adams, a senior analyst for Aceable Agent, a leading platform for real estate education, who also spent 20 years as a Florida real estate broker and rents a condo on Vero Beach, FL. 'They don't understand.'
For Christensen, although she loved feeling the sand between her toes, she did not love it when the Santa Ana winds blew in and caused that sand to pile up to 5-foot mounds on her driveway and roads that left her more or less stranded at home.
'You'd have to hire someone to bulldoze,' she says. 'And there were only a couple of people who did it, so you'd be on a waitlist.'
Salt was another silent but damaging element she hadn't considered, causing her brand-new patio set to soon get covered in rust.
'My neighbor said, 'Oh no, honey, you have to only buy plastic,'' Christensen recalls.
Another annoyance piercing her peaceful retreat was the fact that many people loved Oxnard Shores as much as she did, and flocked to the area for day trips—or, like her, to buy, rent, or renovate their own slice of paradise there.
At one point, she recalls, 'The construction workers next door would look down on my courtyard where I'd be in my bikini and make catcalls. It was horrible. I could never relax.'
She stuck it out in her beach house for just two years before selling the place.
'It wasn't paradise,' she says. 'It was torment.'
Christensen is hardly alone in her ignorance of a beach home's various drawbacks. Today's changing climate presents a whole new crop of problems.
'Recent years have seen a surge in natural disasters such as flooding and beach erosion,' says Adams.
Additionally, that sand erosion means beaches are getting smaller by the year.
'Erosion can dramatically change the safety of a building, and even your view,' Adams explains. 'The government will 'renourish' the beach as much as it can, but it's a losing battle.'
In fact, the news is full of horror stories of beaches where erosion was so extreme, the homes perched on these ever-shrinking pieces of land collapsed or were demolished as too dangerous to inhabit.
'Beach property owners who are attuned to these environmental shifts are scrutinizing how climate change might influence the value and ongoing costs of the homes they own or intend to purchase,' Adams says. 'The hurricanes are deadly. The native Floridian knows that it's part of life, to be prepared to pull up and evacuate. The newcomer may not realize this.'
In addition to the dangers of living near the beach, the expenses could make many a budget-minded homeowner nervous, too.
'The single biggest risk to beachfront property, at least if you're on the ocean, is insurance: You'll be vulnerable to flooding, hurricanes, coastal erosion, and sea level rise, all of which are getting harder and harder to insure,' says Martin Orefice, the CEO of Rent to Own Atlanta.
Many major insurers are pulling out of coastal states like Florida, Texas, and California entirely for this reason, he continues.
'Your beachfront property could be literally and financially underwater in a few years' time, your insurance premiums will be sky-high in the meantime, and you'll have a hard time reselling,' Orefice says.
'Buying a beach house sounds more idyllic than it actually is,' says Cara Ameer, a licensed real estate agent who has helped countless homebuyers in Florida and California. 'You may also need to spend substantially more to get flood insurance … as well as a wind/hurricane policy. Be prepared for several thousand dollars with premiums increasing every year. A beach house could command insurance premiums well over $50,000.'
These are the exact reasons that Adams has chosen to rent a beach condo rather than buy.
'It's cheaper for me,' she says. 'If you look at HOA fees, they're very high. That's from the insurance and all the maintenance.'
At some point, Adams says she can envision a future where only cash buyers and the uber-wealthy will invest in beachfront property, since the rest of the population won't be able to afford the risks and the insurance.
While many might love the smell of salty sea air, the reality is that it corrodes metal, requiring constant maintenance and repainting of beachfront buildings.
'One of the more unique properties of beach homes is that they are in the 'sea spray zone,'' says Jameson Tyler Drew, president of Anubis Properties in California. 'As waves crash nearby, they release water droplets into the air. Most of this is invisible to the naked eye. The water usually evaporates on a hot day, but the salt in it does not. That means your beach house is constantly under a shower of salt so long as there are waves and sun. This spray can also find its way into your house and evaporate as well if it's not properly sealed.'
One client of Drew's who owned a home in Newport Beach made the mistake of parking a classic Ferrari 250 in the garage.
'Even with the car covered in a locked garage, the sea spray found a way inside,' Drew recalls. 'The car's interior eventually became caked with a fine layer of salt, causing cracks on the leather. Salt had also managed to find its way into the frame and engine, causing serious rust damage on a six-figure car.'
'I don't think many people really understand until they own a property and they see things always needing to be replaced,' adds Ameer. 'Door handles, hardware, exterior light fixtures, and other hardware take a beating and constantly have to be replaced. The exterior materials of the home as well as the roof also need constant maintenance and may need to be changed to withstand the elements.'
Despite these many issues, Adams observes that people keep snapping up beachfront properties.
'The market is very healthy,' she says. 'For true beach lovers, the downsides don't deter them.'
Indeed, a home in Nantucket sold in February 2024 for $600,000 after being listed in September for $2.3 million—even though the beach house had lost 70 feet of frontage in a matter of weeks, according to the New York Post.
Despite the house being in jeopardy, the new owner told the outlet: 'The home is amazing. The location is amazing. And the price mitigates the risk to a good degree.'
Christensen might be one of those buyers who just can't give up on beach homes entirely. After selling her first beach house in Ventura, she moved to another beach house in the bay enclave of Point Roberts, WA, purchased for $420,000.
Surely, she figured, the picturesque little town would offer her more tranquility than Ventura. And at first, all was exactly as she'd envisioned.
'Bald eagles soared overhead, and I had the occasional sighting of Orca pods making their way past my windows,' she marvels.
But her idyll was cut short with the arrival of summer—when yet again more tourists descended on the tiny town like a tidal wave, straining its limited resources.
'For two months, it was crawling with people,' she laments.
A year later, Christensen sold her second beach home and vowed never to buy another one.
'I said, 'I'm done with the water,'' she says.
But then she met her husband, who was also a water lover and surfer.
To join her parents in the state and to have a boat, she and her husband moved across the country to Florida to buy a third waterfront home in Cape Coral.
They snapped up a $350,000 four-bedroom home inland on a canal. Here, Christensen thought they could have a boat in their backyard, but wouldn't have to deal with the negatives of beach life.
'People would tell me, 'Don't worry, we don't get hurricanes here,'' she says.
Those people were proved wrong in 2022 when Hurricane Ian tore through the area, the deadliest hurricane to hit Florida since 1935. It destroyed Christensen's dock, sank her family's boat, and damaged the house.
Christensen and her husband decided not to repair the dock or buy another boat. Dock insurance is prohibitively expensive, and Christensen figures they're due for another hurricane at any time.
Moving plans are being discussed, but Christensen says it's not easy finding a place for a water lover like herself that doesn't also come with problems.
'It's a love-hate thing,' she sighs about beach living. 'I'm thinking Alabama. But I hear they have tornadoes.'
Buyers in the Priciest Housing Markets Need 80% Down To Afford Monthly Costs
EXCLUSIVE: Elon Musk Reclaims Ownership of Gene Wilder Home in L.A.—After Foreclosing on Actor's Nephew Over $7 Million Loan
Third Time's the Charm? Man Who Bought Michael Jordan's Beleaguered Mansion Is Now Offering It on Airbnb—After Failed Timeshare and Rental Schemes
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Should You Buy Robinhood Markets While It's Below $110?
Key Points Robinhood has a paid subscriber base of 3.2 million users. The online brokerage generated $927 million in net revenue in Q1 2025. The company has $2.2 billion in net cash on its balance sheet. 10 stocks we like better than Robinhood Markets › In January, I highlighted Robinhood Markets (NASDAQ: HOOD) as a stock to buy for long-term investors, despite doubts about whether the company could do more than disrupt the brokerage industry. Back then, it was trading around $40 per share, and many still questioned its staying power. Fast-forward six months -- not yet the long term -- and the stock has surged past $100, lifting its market capitalization to nearly $90 billion, resulting in a remarkable 173% increase year to date. With shares now near all-time highs, let's dive into what's driving this momentum, what lies ahead, what could go wrong, and whether the stock still makes sense for investors. Here's how Robinhood is growing so quickly Robinhood delivered standout Q1 2025 results, with revenue soaring 50% year over year to $927 million. The biggest driver was a 77% surge in transaction-based revenue, which climbed to $583 million. Robinhood's second-largest revenue stream, net interest income, rose 14% to $290 million, fueled by a larger base of interest-earning assets and a continued ramp-up in securities lending. Moreover, the brokerage gained $2 billion in net deposits in the quarter to a record $18 billion, and Robinhood Gold, the company's subscription offering that costs $5 per month or $50 annually, saw subscribers nearly double year over year from 1.7 million to 3.2 million. Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev summed up the growth on the Q1 earnings call: "Customers are not only trading more with us, but they're entrusting us with more of their assets." As for how its growth is translating to the bottom line, Robinhood produced $336 million in net income, an impressive increase of 114% year over year. Can Robinhood continue to grow? As for where Robinhood goes from here, the company acquired TradePMR, a trading platform designed for independent registered investment advisors, for $300 million in cash and stock. The deal, which allows Robinhood entry into the wealth management sector, is another step in diversifying its business. Additionally, Robinhood recently closed on its $200 million acquisition of Bitstamp, the world's longest-running cryptocurrency exchange, to broaden its addressable market outside of the U.S. "Our 10-year arc, our long-term arc, is to build the No. 1 global financial ecosystem," Tenev added on Robinhood's most recent earnings call. "That means expanding our business from retail only, which it pretty much is now, to also serving businesses and institutions, and also expanding from primarily U.S. to being a full global platform serving customers everywhere." Notably, Robinhood has nine different businesses that each generate at least $100 million in annualized revenue, nearly twice as many as a couple of years ago. Tenev also mentioned other opportunities for growth, including building out 24-hour trading, 401(k) administration for businesses, and employee stock plan administration for public companies. Here's what could go wrong for Robinhood As of now, considering Robinhood's high growth, profitability, and clean balance sheet with $2.2 billion in net cash, you'd be hard pressed to find any problems with its business. However, the stock can be a different story. For high-growth companies like Robinhood, their stocks typically have two issues: share dilution and valuation. Since its IPO, Robinhood's share count has risen by 5.6%, which dilutes investors' ownership stake. The good news is that management is addressing the concern, lowering share-based compensation from $871 million in 2023 to $304 million in 2024. Additionally, management recently increased its share repurchase authorization from $1 billion to $1.5 billion, or nearly all of its $1.6 billion in trailing 12 months of net income. According to management, the buybacks will decrease its share count by approximately 1% in 2025. As for the stock's valuation, Robinhood now trades at roughly 67 times forward earnings estimates, near an all-time high. That's a steep price tag for a company still pouring resources into growth and customer acquisition. While Robinhood's roadmap includes promising new products that could eventually justify the valuation, many remain early stage ideas with no guarantee they will turn into meaningful profits. Is Robinhood stock a buy? Robinhood continues to prove its doubters wrong. With 75% of its 25 million funded accounts coming from members of the millennial and Gen Z generations, the platform is well-positioned for long-term growth as those users get older and build wealth. Still, with shares near all-time highs and valuation stretched, now may not be the best entry point. Long-term investors who believe in the vision might consider holding or dollar-cost averaging, i.e., investing a set amount at predetermined times. But chasing the stock after its massive run comes with real risk for future returns. Should you buy stock in Robinhood Markets right now? Before you buy stock in Robinhood Markets, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Robinhood Markets wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $636,774!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $1,064,942!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,040% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 182% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of July 21, 2025 Collin Brantmeyer has positions in Robinhood Markets. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Should You Buy Robinhood Markets While It's Below $110? was originally published by The Motley Fool Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Google's Sundar Pichai just became a billionaire—but could have been up an extra billion if he hadn't sold stock
Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai has officially joined the billionaire ranks, reaching a net worth of $1.1 billion largely through long-term compensation and a 0.02% stake in the $2.3 trillion company. While far behind Big Tech founders in wealth, Pichai's stake has been boosted by Alphabet's AI-fueled rally—even as he regularly sells shares under prescheduled trading plans, demonstrating a disciplined and well-known approach amid booming investor enthusiasm. Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai has joined the glamorous ranks of the world's billionaires, after the tech giant's class A share price bubbled up 13% over the past month. Pichai's net worth has hit $1.1 billion, the Bloomberg Billionaires Index recorded, courtesy of significant cash reserves and the CEO's 0.02% stake in the company with a market cap of more than $2.3 trillion. Unlike many of his Magnificent Seven peers, the Big Tech boss didn't found the company which has afforded him a 10-figure fortune. Compared with contemporaries like Nvidia's Jensen Huang, Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, or Tesla cofounder Elon Musk, Pichai's net worth is considerably lower given the fact he hasn't held a significant sum of shares since the early days of the company. Pichai's path to billionaire status has also been altered by the fact that he has sold shares in Alphabet which were awarded to him as part of his compensation package. For example, Pichai has sold a reported $650 million in Google-owner Alphabet stock over the past decade he has served as CEO—sales that today would have amounted to more than $1 billion in gains, winning him a net worth of some $2.5 billion per Bloomberg's index. For example, in June Pichai offloaded some 33,000 class C Alphabet shares for a price of approximately $169 apiece, totaling some $5.5 million in sales. But at the time of writing, those shares sit at a little over $193—which would have resulted in a value of more than $6.4 million. Google declined to comment. Advance planning But the CEOs of the world's largest companies are not playing the highs and lows of their company's share prices the way retail investors or Wall Street analysts may be. Many of Pichai's recent sales have been pursuant to Rule 10b5-1, which allows stock sales to be set up in advance by officers of publicly listed companies to avoid any accusations of insider trading. The rule has a number of stipulations, chief among them that a formula (not a person) determines the number, price, and date of the trade. A third party who cannot be influenced by the client must also be employed to conduct the sales. Pichai's sales on July 16 and June 4 of this year were both pursuant to 10b5-1, for example, as were sales made in previous years. This tactic will be of no surprise to Wall Street watchers. Fortune reported last summer that Nvidia's CEO, Jensen Huang, for example, was offloading $14 million in stock on a near-daily basis, all pursuant to the same regulation. At the time, James Reda, managing director at Chicago-based consultancy Gallagher's HR and compensation practice, said moves for such executives make absolute sense: 'Ultimately, if you don't sell the stock you're gonna have to be like Elon Musk and some others that are putting stock up for collateral and getting these humongous loans. 'That just makes everybody more leveraged, why do that? Peel off a little stock on a regular basis and sell it.' The AI billionaires While Alphabet beat market expectations this week with its second quarter results, the majority of the rally behind the company at the moment comes from (no surprise) AI. Pichai isn't alone in thanking artificial intelligence for his good fortune. Last year the world's richest, from Musk and Zuckerberg to Oracle's Larry Ellison, added $585 billion to their fortunes largely thanks to the technology. On the company's earnings call Wednesday, the phrase 'AI' was used some 90 times. Alphabet reported revenues up 14% year over year to $96.4 billion, confirming Google Search, YouTube ads, Google subscriptions, and Google Cloud all delivered double-digit growth in Q2. A key concern for investors—particularly when looking at the market leaders in the AI race—will be whether companies can keep the talent to stay ahead of competitors. OpenAI, for example, has lost some of its staff to Meta's newly created AI unit. Pichai shrugged off such fears, telling investors on the call: 'We've gone through these moments before. We have obviously always deeply invested in talent, including in AI talent, for well over a decade now. I think we have an extraordinary both breadth and depth of the talent. 'In my experience, the top people look for a combination of—they want to really be at the frontier driving progress, and so the mission and how state-of-the-art your work is matters, so that's super important to them, access to compute resources, and access to your peers, working with the best people in the industry,' he added. 'I think we are pretty competitive on all those fronts.' This story was originally featured on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Visa (V) Fell Amid Broad Sell-Off in Card Network Stocks
Sands Capital, an investment management company, released its 'Sands Capital Technology Innovators Fund' Q2 2025 investor letter. A copy of the letter can be downloaded here. Technology Innovators focus on pioneering businesses worldwide that serve as key drivers or beneficiaries of significant long-term changes driven by technology. The fund returned 26.0% (net) in the second quarter compared to a 21.9% return for the benchmark, MSCI ACWI Info Tech and Communication Services Index. Easing geopolitical concerns, renewed AI optimism, resilient macroeconomic data, strong corporate earnings, and technical tailwinds boosted the markets for a quick recovery in the quarter. You can check the fund's top 5 holdings to know more about its best picks for 2025. In its second quarter 2025 investor letter, Sands Capital Technology Innovators Fund highlighted stocks such as Visa Inc. (NYSE:V). Headquartered in San Francisco, California, Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) is a payment technology company. Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) shares returned 1.54% over the past month and appreciated by 36.43% over the last 12 months. On July 24, 2025, Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) stock closed at $353.97 per share, with a market capitalization of $691.48 billion. Sands Capital Technology Innovators Fund stated the following regarding Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) in its second quarter 2025 investor letter: "Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) operates the world's largest retail electronic payment network. Shares declined in June amid a broader selloff in card network stocks following stablecoin-related headlines. Unlike the market, we do not view stablecoin proliferation as a threat to card volumes; in fact, we believe it could expand the addressable market for card networks. While stablecoins may have utility in cross-border business-to business transactions, we think they are unlikely to disrupt consumer-to-merchant payments, where cards offer a compelling value proposition—rewards, liquidity, ubiquity, buyer protections, and trust. Moreover, card networks could enhance stablecoin adoption by providing the rules, protections, and services needed for broader, mainstream use." A close-up of a credit card being swiped on a payment terminal, reflecting the company's payments technology. Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) is in 6th position on our list of 30 Most Popular Stocks Among Hedge Funds. As per our database, 165 hedge fund portfolios held Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) at the end of the first quarter, which was 181 in the previous quarter. In Q1 2025, Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) reported $9.5 billion in net revenue, up 10% year-over-year. While we acknowledge the potential of Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. In another article, we covered Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) and shared the list of stocks Jim Cramer recently discussed. In its Q2 2025 investor letter, Aristotle Atlantic Focus Growth Strategy cited the same reason for Visa Inc.'s (NYSE:V) decline in the quarter. In addition, please check out our hedge fund investor letters Q2 2025 page for more investor letters from hedge funds and other leading investors. READ NEXT: The Best and Worst Dow Stocks for the Next 12 Months and 10 Unstoppable Stocks That Could Double Your Money. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.