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Buying in Myrtle Beach · 2026 Guide

Buying a home
in Myrtle Beach.
What you actually need to know.

No fluff. No sales pitch. Just the honest facts about buying on the Grand Strand from the market conditions to the common mistakes that cost buyers thousands.

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4.5mo
Inventory it's a buyer's market
96%
Avg sale-to-list room to negotiate
$274K
Median sale price Grand Strand
103d
Avg days on market no rush
See what buyers get wrong

Why People Move Here

Myrtle Beach isn't just a vacation.
It's a lifestyle decision.

🏖
60 Miles of Beach
One of the longest continuous stretches of beach on the East Coast with something for every lifestyle and budget
100+ Golf Courses
More golf per capita than anywhere in the US. If you golf, Myrtle Beach is the most practical place to own property
🌤
230 Sunny Days
Mild winters, long summers. Coming from the Northeast or Midwest? This is what 230 days of sunshine feels like after a bad winter
💰
No State Income Tax on SS
SC doesn't tax Social Security. Low property taxes. A $380K home here costs less monthly than a $650K home in NJ
Growth Signal
#2 fastest-growing metro in the US people are voting with their feet
NC
#1 origin
NY
#2 origin
NJ
#3 origin
PA
#4 origin
OH
#5 origin

Condotel Borrower Mistakes

5 common borrower mistakes
with a condotel.

01
Mistake

Skipping flood zone research

Buying in an NFIP flood zone without knowing it. Flood insurance can add $1,500–$4,000/year to your carrying costs a number that changes your entire deal math.

The fix
Always pull the FEMA flood map certificate before making an offer. We do this on every property before you ever write a contract.
02
Mistake

Ignoring HOA financials on condos

Myrtle Beach condo HOAs vary wildly. Some have $400/month fees with funded reserves. Others have $600/month fees with a pending $15,000 special assessment you inherit at closing.

The fix
Request the HOA financial statements, reserve study, and meeting minutes going back 24 months before making any offer on a condo.
03
Mistake

Assuming any condo can be Airbnb'd

Not every condo allows short-term rentals. Many HOAs prohibit rentals under 30 days. Buying an "investment condo" without checking STR rules is one of the most expensive mistakes we see.

The fix
Verify STR eligibility in the HOA bylaws before writing the contract not during due diligence. We check this upfront on every investment inquiry.
04
Mistake

Underestimating the insurance stack

Coastal SC properties often need three separate policies: homeowner's, flood (NFIP), and wind/hail. Budget for all three or your lender will surprise you at closing.

The fix
Get an insurance quote before you close not after. We connect buyers with Grand Strand insurance specialists early in the process so there are no surprises.
05
Mistake

Buying without a local lender pre-approval

Out-of-state online lenders often don't understand condotel financing restrictions, SC attorney closings, or DSCR loan requirements. Deals fall apart at the finish line because of lender issues, not property issues.

The fix
Chapter 3 is affiliated with BrickWood Mortgage (NMLS #189497), a Grand Strand lender that has been providing mortgages locally for over 18 years and knows every building, every HOA warrantability issue, and every financing quirk in this market.

The Appreciation Engine

Why Grand Strand homes
keep appreciating.

Typical home value, Myrtle Beach metro

Estimated typical home values for the Myrtle Beach metro, drawn from the Federal Housing Finance Agency home price index and scaled to today's typical value near $310,000. Values dipped after 2008, drifted through the 2010s, then climbed steeply from 2021. The typical home has more than doubled since its 2012 to 2013 low. The dotted line projects values to 2030 if the long-run appreciation rate continues. It is an estimate, not a guarantee. Hover any year for its value.

Typical home value$100K$150K$200K$250K$300K$350K$400K$450K2006201020142018202220262030Rapid rise begins, 2021Low point, ~$130KToday, ~$310KForecast, ~$391K

Source: FHFA All-Transactions House Price Index for the Myrtle Beach metro (public data), indexed to current market value. A typical, blended figure. Single-family homes, condos, and individual neighborhoods each vary.

+131%since the 2012 low
+85%since 2019

Five forces push in the same direction, and they are structural rather than seasonal:

In-migration. Myrtle Beach is the second fastest-growing metro area in the country (U.S. Census Bureau, latest estimates), and North Carolina is the top source of buyers.
Constrained supply. Coastal land is finite and building has not kept pace with arrivals. More buyers than homes pushes prices up.
Affordability. Named the 4th most affordable beach town in America by House Beautiful, so out-of-state buyers arriving with home-sale equity stretch further here and keep demand high.
Unique SC tax breaks. South Carolina does not tax Social Security income, taxes a primary home at a 4% assessment ratio, fully exempts 100% disabled veterans from property tax on their home, and gives owners 65 and older a Homestead exemption on the first $50,000 of value (SC Department of Revenue).
Rental income. A year-round tourism economy lets many homes earn short-term-rental income, adding investor demand on top of buyers.

Single-Family Buyer Mistakes

5 common buyer mistakes
with a single-family home.

01
Mistake

Roof age and wind features drive your insurance

On a coastal single-family home, your premium is set largely by roof age, roof shape, and wind-mitigation features. An older roof can add thousands a year or make a home hard to insure at all, and most buyers never check before they fall for the house.

The fix
We pull roof age and wind-mitigation details before you write an offer and get a real insurance quote early, so the premium is a known number, not a closing-table surprise.
02
Mistake

Assuming the home is on city sewer

Many Grand Strand single-family homes, especially in Conway, Murrells Inlet, and rural Horry County, are on septic rather than sewer. A failing drain field is a $10,000 to $25,000 repair, and lenders and insurers treat septic differently.

The fix
We confirm sewer versus septic up front, and when it is septic we build a septic inspection into your due diligence so the system is verified before you close.
03
Mistake

Thinking only oceanfront homes flood

Inland single-family homes near the Waccamaw River, the Intracoastal Waterway, and low-lying marsh flood too. Buyers assume that not oceanfront means no flood risk, skip the elevation certificate, then meet the flood premium after the appraisal.

The fix
We check the FEMA flood map and base flood elevation on every property, oceanfront or not, so you know the flood-zone designation and any insurance requirement before you commit.
04
Mistake

Underestimating lot, drainage, and tree upkeep

A single-family home carries costs a condo buyer never sees: yard and landscaping, drainage and grading, and mature trees that can mean storm damage or removal bills in the thousands. These rarely make it into the monthly math.

The fix
We walk the lot with you and flag drainage, grading, and tree concerns during showings, so the true cost of ownership is in your numbers before you make an offer.
05
Mistake

Waiving inspections because it is a buyer's market

With months of single-family supply, some buyers waive inspections to win a home they do not need to compete for. In a market this negotiable, that trades away your strongest protection for no reason at all.

The fix
You have leverage here. We keep your inspection, survey, and repair or concession requests in the deal and use the soft market to negotiate them in your favor.

Market Snapshot · As of June 20, 2026

It's a buyer's market.
Here's what that means for you.

4.5mo
4.5 months
Inventory · Single-Family
You have options. More supply means more negotiating leverage and less pressure to rush.
9.2mo
9.2 months
Inventory · Condos
Condo supply is roughly double single-family. Buyers have real leverage on price and concessions, especially on resale condos.
$274K
Median Sale Price
SFH runs $328K–$385K. Condos $228K–$240K. New construction from $270K. Budget shapes your best strategy.
103 days
Avg Days on Market
Properties sit longer here. You won't be rushed into a bad decision. Take time to inspect, compare, and negotiate.
+10.5%
Median Price YoY
Prices are still appreciating year-over-year. Buying in a buyer's market with rising values is the best of both worlds.
30–45 days
Typical Closing Timeline
SC requires a licensed attorney for closing. Budget 30–45 days from accepted offer. Remote closings available for out-of-state buyers.

Buyer FAQ

Every question out-of-state buyers ask us.

Honest answers. No sales spin.

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Is Myrtle Beach actually a good place to buy right now?

Yes for the right buyer. It's a genuine buyer's market with 4.5 months of SFH inventory, 103-day average days on market, and sellers accepting offers around 96% of list. Prices are still appreciating year-over-year at around 10.5%. If you're buying to hold as a primary, retirement home, or rental the conditions in 2026 are better than they were in 2020–2022 when buyers were competing in bidding wars.

Do I need to visit before making an offer?

Not necessarily. We facilitate remote purchases routinely 3D virtual tours, cinematic listing video, neighborhood context walkthroughs over video call, and remote online notarization for closing documents. Most out-of-state buyers we work with visit once for the inspection, then close remotely. Some never visit until after closing. It depends entirely on your comfort level.

What's the difference between a condo, condotel, and townhouse in Myrtle Beach?

A standard condo is a unit in a residential building eligible for conventional, FHA, VA, and DSCR financing if the HOA is warrantable. A condotel is a unit inside a hotel-style building with a front desk, rental program, and shared amenities only eligible for cash or portfolio loans, which significantly limits your buyer pool when you eventually sell. A townhouse is typically a multi-story attached unit with its own entrance usually the most favorable financing and most flexible HOA rules. Knowing which you're buying matters enormously for financing, STR eligibility, and resale.

What does closing cost a buyer in South Carolina?

SC buyers typically pay: lender fees (1–2% of loan amount), title insurance and attorney fees ($800–$1,500), prepaid interest, property tax escrow, homeowner's insurance at closing, and any agreed-upon buyer-side concessions. Total buyer closing costs typically run 2–4% of the purchase price. SC is a mandatory attorney state a licensed SC attorney must conduct the closing. We work with several Grand Strand closing attorneys and can recommend one early in the process.

Can I Airbnb a home I buy in Myrtle Beach?

It depends entirely on the property type, zoning, and HOA rules. Single-family homes in unincorporated Horry County generally allow STR with a permit. Myrtle Beach city limits has stricter restrictions. Most condo HOAs either explicitly allow STR, explicitly prohibit it, or require minimum rental periods of 30 days. Condotels typically allow STR through their rental management program. We verify STR eligibility before you write any offer not during due diligence when you've already committed.

What insurance do I need?

Most Grand Strand properties need up to three policies: homeowner's insurance ($1,200–$4,000/year depending on proximity to water), flood insurance through NFIP ($800–$2,500/year for properties in a flood zone), and sometimes a separate wind/hail policy ($500–$1,500/year). Condo owners typically need an HO-6 policy to cover the interior and their personal liability. Get quotes before closing not after so the numbers are in your budget before you commit.

How do I know if a condo HOA is financially healthy?

Request three documents: the most recent reserve study (shows how much money is set aside for major repairs), the current budget (shows monthly income vs. expenses), and the last 12–24 months of meeting minutes (shows any pending or recently approved special assessments). A healthy HOA has a funded reserve ratio above 70% and no pending major litigation or assessments. We review these with every condo offer before you go under contract.

Is it better to buy new construction or resale?

Both have real advantages in this market. New construction (from $270K, average $349K) gives you modern systems, builder warranties, and often incentives like rate buy-downs. Resale lets you negotiate more aggressively with 79% of active listings carrying a price reduction and 103-day average DOM, sellers are motivated. The right answer depends on your timeline, budget, and whether you need immediate rental income (resale) or can wait for delivery (new construction, often 6–12 months out).

Ready to start?

Let's find the right
property for you.

Whether you're relocating, investing, or buying a vacation home we'll walk you through every step of the Grand Strand buying process with no pressure and no guessing.

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Chapter 3 Realty · 854.333.2135

Common Questions

Frequently asked questions

Why do buyers use Chapter 3 Realty?

We tell buyers what other agents gloss over. We pull flood, insurance, and HOA facts before you ever write an offer, we ask enough of the right questions up front that most buyers tour only about three homes, and our in-house lender knows every building and financing quirk on the Grand Strand. That mix of honesty and local depth is why buyers often say Chapter 3 Realty is the best brokerage to buy a home from.

How long does it take to buy a home in Myrtle Beach?

Most Myrtle Beach purchases close 30 to 45 days after going under contract. Cash purchases can close in about two weeks, while financed condo purchases can take longer if the building needs lender review.

What closing costs do buyers pay in South Carolina?

Buyers typically pay 2 to 4 percent of the purchase price, covering lender fees, title insurance, attorney fees, and prepaid taxes and insurance. South Carolina requires an attorney to conduct the closing.

Do I need a local agent to buy in Myrtle Beach?

South Carolina does not require buyers to use an agent, but the Grand Strand market includes condotels, HOA-heavy communities, and flood zones where local representation changes outcomes in measurable ways.

After the close

Closing isn't the end of the relationship. We keep you on our newsletter and alert you when new building permits are applied for near your property, so you always know what is changing around your investment.

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