I will be moving to Boston with my wife and our two year old. I will be working in Cambridge (Kendall/MIT being the closest transit stop). I was wondering what would be some good places to live when our budget is about 4000 USD/mo. Ideally we would like to have access to a garden, but not being too far from the city. Any advice gratefully received.
This is the kind of post we used to have stickied answers for and a wiki when I was still a redditor at /r/boston. I'm not sure if those things are even an option on Lemmy.
There's an entire science to answering this question and I don't have the bandwidth to type it all out from scratch. But as briefly as I can state it, here's what you need to know about finding an apartment in Greater Boston.
Our public transit is quite literally on fire most days and cannot be relied on. Stay as close to your job as you can.
Our traffic is abysmal and parking is a full contact sport. Try not to own a car if don't have to.
Our building stock is old and filled with lead paint, which is hazardous to young children.
landlords in Mass are legally required to de-lead a unit with a child under age 5 in it. They are not legally allowed to discriminate against families. However, it can cost $15-20k to de-lead a unit and there is no return on that investment in the form of a higher rent. So although discrimination against families with children is prohibited, in practice with the highly competitive market here it is easy for landlords simply to pick another applicant or find a non-prohibited reason to deny your application.
Most of our old housing stock is in 2-3 unit buildings (aka 2-families or 3-families) without elevators and with small shared yards.
A "garden" in the US is an area where food or flowers are grown, if you just want a patch of grass it is a yard.
Our rental market revolves around leases that start September first, with most landlords trying to get leases signed in the late spring and early summer. So if you show up next month, you will have very little to look at.
The market is incredibly competitive, and bidding wars on apartments are not unheard of.
You will almost certainly end up working with a rental agent.
Rental agents are universally disliked.
You can expect to pay 4x rent to move in: first month, last month, one month security, and a 1 month fee to the agent. These are the only fees allowed by law (the law does allow a small fee for a new lock).
Most apartments listed by agents are listed on the MLS (Multiple Listing Service). Apartments listed by private owners are not.
MLS listings can be found on a wide variety of websites but for some reason Coldwell Banker seems to have all of them for Boston rentals so you might as well use that
Non-MLS listings can be found on craigslist, facebook marketplace, etc.
On the plus side, your budget is realistic and will get you a nicely updated unit, we have excellent local parks and playgrounds (better on the Boston side of the Charles river, but still pretty good up north) so you may not need a private yard, and in Cambridge and Somerville it is practical to live without a car, especially if you're willing to commute by bike.
I'm a real estate agent. I don't do rentals and am not here soliciting a commission. I drew a map of areas I'd suggest you look at and put in the following criteria for my search (consumers cannot do a search like this, this is using a tool for professional agents only): 2+ bedrooms, 900+ sf, certified deleaded or lead paint flagged as "none" (because of a gut renovation or construction after 1978, the year lead paint was banned), price ceiling $4000. That returned only 31 hits. It will also include older buildings that have been completely renovated. Remove the bit about lead and you get almost 200 hits.
Here they are on a map:
It gives you a sort of heat map of where the apartments are, and all of those places are neighborhoods/cities I'd say you should consider.
Here are several units I would recommend taking a look at if you were on the market today. No affiliation with Coldwell Banker or any other firm, I work for myself and don't have a website so these are just the first hits that pop up when I search the MLS numbers:
https://www.coldwellbankerhomes.com/ma/arlington/1-watermill-pl-521/pid_53662391/ now you are getting a bit farther from your job in a more family-oriented town. Probably 15-20 minute drive to work, or a manageable bike ride. Older full service elevator building with a large common green space and close to quite a few parks, etc., at an attractive price.
I definitely don’t have an agent’s knowledge or experience, but I’ve lived in the city for years without a car, so I can at least weigh in on that. Granted, I have a good location and friends nearby with cars on the occasion I need it.
I definitely have plenty of times I have to reroute myself from one subway or bus line being unreliable. I sometimes get to pick between trains/buses that are both going the same direction, so transit apps can sometimes make that pretty smooth. I wouldn’t say the train gets 99.99% reliability, but 90% still seems accurate; it gets me where I need to go. Having a blue bike subscription (the local bike share system) also provides easy access, though I doubt that’s practical for families. I especially prefer all those non-car options during peak commute hours. Just yesterday I was headed home on a bike and cruised past a long line of stalled traffic.
I'm hoping to relocate to the Boston area sometime SoonTM and this is a great future resource for me!
With respect to rental agents — is this something where individuals have to seek them out ourselves, or will the landlord of any particular rental unit point applicants towards their preferred agent/agency?
You'll generally find an agent and let them show you around. The only places that work with preferred agents are the really big properties with dozens or hundreds of units. Even then you can work with your own agent, but if you go for new luxury towers that are working on getting leased up they'll often cover the fee.