Meet the housing market ‘hackers’ who do not live in their homes: These people bought run-down cabins, moved into their sheds and slept in their basements to rake in extra cash
Fortune · Getty Images

Across America there's a growing trend: people own homes, they just don't live in them. Instead, tenants renting in expensive areas are buying cheaper properties as holiday homes, retirement nest eggs, or to bring in some extra cash.

The individuals Fortune spoke to said the choice to buy a house which isn't their primary residence was pretty simple: they had a pot of savings and didn't want to miss out on the returns promised by the housing sector.

After all, while the S&P500 tends to have an average return rate of around 10% a year, property comes with an average value increase of 5.4% annually and might have the added boon of rental or holiday letting income.

So individuals are choosing to bury their cash in property, even if they don't have the benefit of that roof over their head.

Whether it was purchasing a smaller holiday home, buying a rental in need of some love, or even moving into the shed, there's one thing everyone agreed on: the get-rich-quick property market America loves so much simply no longer exists.

I bought a run-down cabin in the mountains

For six months 36-year-old Allison Ullo cried weekly because the cabin she had bought in the Catskills was hemorrhaging cash.

The two-bed wooden property needed a complete refurbishment, meaning insurance was difficult to secure and handymen were hard to come by.

On top of that, New York-based Ullo lived two hours away and as a self-employed entrepreneur working two jobs and several side hustles, the burden was almost too much to bear.

With the help of her parents, Ullo turned the fortunes of the cabin around: replacing windows, repairing stoves and making the home habitable.

It's now listed on Airbnb and is bringing in around $1,500 a month—enough to pay the mortgage and cover any other unforeseen issues.

The labor of love doesn't just give Ullo a bolthole in the mountains, but also represents a retirement option and financial safe haven for the future: "Who knows what will happen but for me freedom is options," she said.

"Having the option to either move and live there with no mortgage ... or the option to sell off a property and make money so I can buy the retirement home of my dreams or use it as a salary that I'm going to live on, those options are what real freedom is."

Ullo is now open to the idea of buying a second cabin, saying the renovation of her first—which she purchased for approximately $300,000—has inspired confidence.

Ullo—who has inspired a number of friends to go and buy their own cabins—said she'd prioritize buying another Catskills property over a New York apartment.