Did you plan to buy a home — but found renting is cheaper? We want to hear from you

As mortgage rates and home prices have risen, some who had planned to buy a home have decided to rent instead — because it can be cheaper.

For some, that means putting off buying their first home. For others, it means holding on to the home they own, but renting a different one to live in.

If either of these sounds like you, we want to hear from you.

Please fill out the form below, and an NPR reporter may get in touch with you for a story. (We will not use your submission until we have communicated with you and obtained your consent to use the details that will be published.)

 

Your ears can’t prick up, but your ear muscles sure try

Humans actually have vestigial muscles that activate when listening closely to something, even though people lost the ability to really move their ears about 25 million years ago.

In the LA fires and the NC floods, ‘CPR for mental health’ treats unseen wounds

From Altadena to Asheville, people devastated by recent disasters encountered helpers trained in Psychological First Aid. Like CPR, anybody can learn it.

What it’s like to party in the native habitat of Groundhog Day star Punxsutawney Phil

It was a big party in Punxsutawney this weekend. "This is my favorite holiday," one local says of the fuss-free day, adding, "You don't have to even see your in-laws." This year, Phil saw his shadow.

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The odds are about 1% that the football field-sized object could hit the Earth, but that makes it the closest call in more than 20 years.

Did your date give you ‘the ick’? Here’s the science behind the feeling

You know that feeling when someone you're dating does this one thing that you just can't look past? Here's what scientists say about why we react this way and whether the feeling is reversible.

Fidgeting at your desk? Your body may be trying to tell you something

That spontaneous restless movement plays an important role in our health. Here's what to do the next time you find yourself bouncing your knee or clicking and unclicking your pen.

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