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Back in SF for the first time in 2 years


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2017 Oct 11, 7:54pm   32,247 views  152 comments

by joshuatrio   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

I've been back in the Bay Area this past week, for the first time in 2 years since moving to Atlanta. Was wondering how I'd feel about the area since leaving and if I'd miss it or not (since sooooooo many people told me I'd miss the hell out of CA).

Here are my thoughts in order of my trip so far.

1) Nice weather
2) Too expensive (I paid - errr my company paid - $7.95 for a bottle of water the other day)
3) White men are pussies out here
4) The homeless population has gotten worse
5) I don't miss the druggies
6) I watched a guy shit on the sidewalk yesterday
7) This morning a dude was walking around with no pants
8) There are a ton of dike like women
9) Peet's coffee's bathroom's are only for gender neutral people, not gender specific people - so it seems
10) I prefer living in my paid off house in Atlanta, rather than a shack, that's $2-3k/month
11) The hipsters at work talk about guns like they are evil
12) I like my gun.
13) Hot weather in the south isn't that bad, especially when your neighborhood has a pool
14) I can swim outside and take my shirt off in the south, because it actually gets hot enough
15) I had a good sandwich the other day at an irish pub
16) These tech companies want employees to think they have a "hip" place to work, but in actuality, it's a bunch of developers crammed on a small table - slave labor.
17) I love telecommuting and keeping my west coast salary
18) The tv/news out here, holy shit, talk about living in a bubble. Thank God you guys have the internet
19) CA has to be the most family unfriendly state

Would I move back? Probably not. It really seems that it's regressing (despite being "progressive") into a shit hole.

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73   NewGuy   2018 Jan 22, 8:19am  

South Carolina. If you are in California reading this, please do not move here. I like living in a community where people give a shit about each other, sending my kids to public school, and being able to get in the ocean without a wet suit. No offense but you guys tend to ruin things. Not sure how you'd screw up the warm ocean water, but I'm sure you'd find a way. Also, it's too hot here, like you have to wear shorts sometimes, you wouldn't like it.
74   Ceffer   2018 Jan 22, 9:59am  

Californians care about each other. Who would they have to sue if they didn't have neighbors?
75   WatermelonUniversity   2018 Jan 22, 1:01pm  

joshuatrio says
Actually, the "bad idea" would have been to finance for 15-30 years, where I would have paid over $80-150k in interest.


as NewGuy pointed out, instead of the 80% earning 10%, now it earns exactly 2.2%. on the other hand, paying cash is not a problem in the bay area due to its higher appreciation rate. many people had no idea why 2.2% was relevant. this is why.

smart money leverages and gets 177% return annually while the average gets 2.2%.

joshuatrio says
So, enjoy your liberal utopia while things disintegrate. Keep telling yourself that life is good because of the weather :)


since you asked. if i was the boasting type i'll list all the great things about life in suburban Los Angleles compared to a place like Atlanta. my house costs twice as much and appreciates twice as fast. great tech jobs here are plenty and i only need to work one job and retire comfortably. my income more than qualifies for a $1M house and the average home here is only $650K. i drive a new MB every 3 years and i have more money than i can spend while my 401K is maxed. i take vacation twice a year because the company gives me close to 2 months off a year. the weather is just icing on the cake. why would i ever want to move to a place like Atlanta?

over the years i see many people get priced out, leaving CA. some just casually mention their leaving. some go at great length to boast their inflated income, assets, great life in another state to make a point. and smart people take the boasting with a grain of salt. but even if it's true they have this great life outside CA, why did they wait so long? 99.5% of the time they needed a down payment. so they stayed for the easy money, the easy money they apparently couldn't have gotten elsewhere. otherwise, wouldn't have stayed in CA for so long and "suffered" for years as they described in details.

houses are cheap for a reason. there is no free lunch. one can hide in white neighborhoods but do they work (where 50% of co-workers are mostly likely black)? get out of the house sometimes? do their cars run out of gas, break down in the middle of the road at night? in an area that has 50% blacks? when criminals plan their home invasions, do they choose black neighborhoods with nothing to rob, or they pick the white middle class neighborhoods where there are more to gain?

lets check back 10-20-30 years and see how much my house will be worth and how much your house will be worth.
76   WatermelonUniversity   2018 Jan 22, 1:12pm  

the home estimate on Zillow is the one that can be off, and really off.

median home price for last year is the only accurate number on Zillow. good for you if your house appreciates that much. but most of the time that's either:

1) an error or
2) something is wrong with the house that it was sold for much less than a similar house in the area. or maybe it is a much older house in an area with mostly new houses.

joshuatrio says
anon_5f0e8 says
there is zero report claiming Atlanta went up 20%+ (for it to go from $250K to $300K+) but there are a lot of 8-10%.

i'll believe the reports i read online over some wild claims.




Without giving you my actual address, here is output from your buddy Zillow.

For the record, I bought at the tail end of 2016. So I have owned for one year and a few months :)

willywonka says
Unless you are going to invest that money instead and live on the streets. You also have to factor in no rent, but of course, maintenance.


Previous owners put a new roof, HVAC and appliances in the house. It needs nothing major.

We re-upped the home warranty ($500/yr), so that if anyth...
77   anonymous   2018 Jan 22, 1:48pm  

joshuatrio says

Lol.. OK. I could afford CA. I just didn't want to tie myself to a 1950's shit shack that needed a full remodel. Plus, the large majority of people I worked with out there were check to check. Everyone was house/rent/bill/debt poor.


Correct - but that is why I said (post 55) comfortably afford. I get it - like you (I suspect) I am a tightwad at heart, so yeah while I could have streeeeeched to afford a decent place in coastal ca, I didn't want to put myself in that uncomfortable financial position.

But like I said, that all changed when I got extremely lucky and got a sizeable inheritance. Suddenly what was previously unfeasible, was, and once that happened, my corresponding outlook suddenly brightened and when that happened the comfortable in CA vs the Mansion in ATL became a no brainer for CA (all things considered).
78   WookieMan   2018 Jan 22, 2:01pm  

BorderPatrol says
my house costs twice as much and appreciates twice as fast

It can crash twice as fast too though. Primary homes should never be thought of as investments. Ever.

BorderPatrol says
great tech jobs here are plenty and i only need to work one job and retire comfortably

This is the case if you're educated and not an idiot pretty much anywhere in America. Not necessarily tech jobs at the rate you can find in CA, but there's always a tech job somewhere that as a ratio of income to cost of living it's generally equal to CA. Income levels and the cost of living generally stay at similar ratios across the country. Again, I preface this by saying educated and also not an educated idiot. Your income to COL ratio in LA burbs is very likely similar to income to COL ratio in Dallas or Atlanta or Chicago.

BorderPatrol says
my income more than qualifies for a $1M house and the average home here is only $650K.

Good for what you can qualify for. I assume you made the smart move and bought a place for $500k? I'd never be heavily tied up financially into my primary home. There are things completely out of your control that could force you to move tomorrow and if it happened to be 2008 or 2009 roughly, and were forced to sell, well that might not have turned out so well. You could also do well, so your point is obviously still valid. Gains can't be taken as gospel and neither can losses is all I'm trying to say. Pen on paper always looks better then the reality most the time.

You also really need to think about a house. 6-8 hours of your time per day are just sleeping in it. You mentioned you vacation. More people work from home, so this argument isn't as valid, but most still do work a 40+ hour work week outside of their home. You are in CA and likely do things outdoors because of the weather. Long story short, you don't spend all that much time actively awake in your home, or at least most people don't. I have no interest in paying much more than 10% of my gross income towards a house. I'm not being a smart ass, but I genuinely feel bad for people that pay more than this towards the glorified roof over their head.

BorderPatrol says
i drive a new MB every 3 years and i have more money than i can spend while my 401K is maxed.

No problem with people that like cars. Not my thing personally. Congrats on the 401K, more people need to do this. Not sure what this contributes to the discussion though. Be proud of your accomplishments, but on an anonymous forum I do hope you understand that no one believes you.

I've always lived in Chicago area. ANYONE that has EVER moved out of here has boasted how much better it is. In some cases it's true, in others people are just as miserable yet they put on a show. Not saying Joshuatrio is doing this, but very few people will ever tell you the reality of their situation. Unless you physically pick up and move yourself to that location, no one else's opinion on it even matters. You could move to ATL tomorrow and absolutely love it. You have no idea and can't really judge it. This is where people and their online personalities go too far. If someone else if happy with what they're doing or did, who gives a shit.
79   joshuatrio   2018 Jan 22, 2:39pm  

BorderPatrol says

as NewGuy pointed out, instead of the 80% earning 10%, now it earns exactly 2.2%. on the other hand, paying cash is not a problem in the bay area due to its higher appreciation rate. many people had no idea why 2.2% was relevant. this is why.


I didn't disagree with NewGuy. Without a crystal ball, I don't know what the market is going to do. I needed a house, so I bought a house. It was nice paying cash for it.

Zillow got brought into the equation, because your buddies claimed that Zillow showed only 2.2% appreciation. When in fact, certain pockets have had much higher appreciation. And no, nothing was wrong with my house. I live in a nice, suburban, well-kept neighborhood.

This thread originally started out about why CA has gone downhill (and it has). I know, because I lived there for 8 years. And yes, I could have purchased a home on the Central Coast, but I'm glad I didn't.

BorderPatrol says
since you asked. if i was the boasting type i'll list all the great things about life in suburban Los Angleles compared to a place like Atlanta. my house costs twice as much and appreciates twice as fast. great tech jobs here are plenty and i only need to work one job and retire comfortably. my income more than qualifies for a $1M house and the average home here is only $650K.


So? I choose to live completely debt free. Just because you qualify for something doesn't mean anything anymore. I know people making $40k a year who were approved for a $70k escalade. Credit is a poor indicator of wealth.

I work for a tech company based out of SF, and fly there several times a year. I keep my west coast salary, and live where it's cheaper. Win win. Especially when you have kids.

BorderPatrol says
i drive a new MB every 3 years and i have more money than i can spend while my 401K is maxed. i take vacation twice a year because the company gives me close to 2 months off a year. the weather is just icing on the cake. why would i ever want to move to a place like Atlanta?


And you only qualify for a $1million dollar mortgage? LOL!!!!

I only get 4 weeks time off per year though. Nice deal on 2 months.

BorderPatrol says
one can hide in white neighborhoods but do they work (where 50% of co-workers are mostly likely black)? get out of the house sometimes? do their cars run out of gas, break down in the middle of the road at night? in an area that has 50% blacks? when criminals plan their home invasions, do they choose black neighborhoods with nothing to rob, or they pick the white middle class neighborhoods where there are more to gain?


So now liberals are racist/stereotyping against blacks? Hahaha.

WookieMan says
In some cases it's true, in others people are just as miserable yet they put on a show. Not saying Joshuatrio is doing this, but very few people will ever tell you the reality of their situation. Unless you physically pick up and move yourself to that location, no one else's opinion on it even matters. You could move to ATL tomorrow and absolutely love it. You have no idea and can't really judge it.


Wookie, I agree with you. The purpose of this thread was to point out how much San Francisco/CA has turned into a shit hole, and why I was glad that I left. I had to defend/prove that life outside of the CA bubble does exist, and home appreciation in certain pockets (do exist). It's now turning into a kindergarten match of "no you can't" - "yes you can."

I remember living in that bubble, and having the same mindset.

I've said it before and I'll say it again. CA is the most beautiful state in the country (and yes, I'll visit the national parks and my friends). But it is certainly going down the tubes.
80   WatermelonUniversity   2018 Jan 22, 2:41pm  

WookieMan says
t can crash twice as fast too though.


that's not how it works for housing. this is not individual stocks. i'm 100% certain you never looked at the graphs for Atlanta and LA. i would suggest doing researches before commenting. i have avoided responding to many of your lengthy posts on various topic for this reason. consider this the last one.

WookieMan says
Primary homes should never be thought of as investments. Ever.


tell me something i haven't heard before. but what you don't realize, what you repeated is only for the average people. when one can turn $10K in to $160K over 5 years, how is that not a good investment?

WookieMan says
Again, I preface this by saying educated and also not an educated idiot. Your income to COL ratio in LA burbs is very likely similar to income to COL ratio in Dallas or Atlanta or Chicago.


the point you are missing is why move to Atlanta when i already make comfortable money and can afford a house easily. that's what my post was responding to.

WookieMan says
I assume you made the smart move and bought a place for $500k? I'd never be heavily tied up financially into my primary home.


completely wrong. i only put down $10K. what tied up money are we talking about here? my housing expenses is $2440 and the rent is $2600. I am SAVING money by buying at the right time.

WookieMan says
I genuinely feel bad for people that pay more than this towards the glorified roof over their head.


feel sorry for people who can afford to buy? LOL. well, i feel sorry for people who can't afford to buy and need to throw out a bunch of excuses to justify themselves.

WookieMan says
Not sure what this contributes to the discussion though. Be proud of your accomplishments, but on an anonymous forum I do hope you understand that no one believes you.


people bragging about private schools, all cash purchase for a house. why is only my "bragging" in question? sounds like the bias is strong. one thing you don't realize, nobody believes me just like nobody believes someone had $250K in cash to buy a house, when they could have used it for a down payment in CA. you actually HELP prove my point.

WookieMan says
If someone else if happy with what they're doing or did, who gives a shit.


then why are you even responding to my post? if i'm simply saying why i'm happy to stay in CA? that's right. worry about your own life an finances.
81   WatermelonUniversity   2018 Jan 22, 3:05pm  

joshuatrio says
Zillow got brought into the equation, because your buddies claimed that Zillow showed only 2.2% appreciation. When in fact, certain pockets have had much higher appreciation. And no, nothing was wrong with my house. I live in a nice, suburban, well-kept neighborhood.


Atlanta's appreciation rate is 2.2% everywhere.
https://www.neighborhoodscout.com/ga/atlanta/real-estate it's only 7.9% last year because it was depressed many years. over time it will be 2.2%.

joshuatrio says
I choose to live completely debt free.

and many people chose to make money long term leveraging, staying where they are, without having to move to a worse neighborhoods.

joshuatrio says
And you only qualify for a $1million dollar mortgage? LOL!!!!

and you only had $250K for a house? LOL!!! if i paid cash in Atlanta I would have been able to buy a much better house. i have looked at Atlanta market. $250K is rental home quality.

joshuatrio says

So now liberals are racist/stereotyping against blacks? Hahaha.

thanks for admitting that, TYPICALLY, only Trump supporters are racist against blacks.
82   krc   2018 Jan 22, 3:49pm  

A few years back I looked at moving to Atlanta. Company is based in Alpharetta/Roswell area, and it is very nice. It is a little colder in the winters and hotter/humid in the summers. But not bad. For me, the recreational options are just not as good. Yes - you have lake lanier. Yes - Savannah is a two our drive away (maybe a bit more). But, nothing like the sierras. Nothing like being 30 min from the ocean, etc.. That said, if I didn't have family in the bay area I probably would have moved because the COL is so much cheaper in ATL. The restaurants are good - maybe not SF quality- but good enough to satisfy most foodies. And, Caribbean food there is awesome.
But, don't tell me that traffic is any better there than in the bay area. It is not. There is are very few no-growth cities and so everyone is building and building without the infrastructure to support it. Plus, I worry that if I leave CA I won't be able to buy back in and I couldn't afford to buy in ATL and keep my place here (without pain). And, so, I guess I just think CA real estate is a better long term value, though time will tell on that.
83   WookieMan   2018 Jan 22, 3:52pm  

BorderPatrol says


that's not how it works for housing. this is not individual stocks. i'm 100% certain you never looked at the graphs for Atlanta and LA. i would suggest doing researches before commenting. i have avoided responding to many of your lengthy posts on various topic for this reason. consider this the last one.

Cool. I'll consider it the last one.

That said it's not worth researching. I'm sure you get emails and cards from your local real estate broker letting you know real estate is local. How many sub-markets are there in LA/Orange County? A ton. Some good some bad. LA as a whole means nothing, and neither does ATL. So yeah, I'll just go research it, just like you researched ATL is not a good place to live with no evidence because you read it on the internet. As you'll see later in this post, there's reason to be skeptical of your claims.

BorderPatrol says
when one can turn $10K in to $160K over 5 years

Because this is what happens? On paper? Sure. When they took those gains and bought a boat or a 2nd house I'm sure they did just dandy. This, this is what happens with most equity. You do realize that, right? It ends up back in someone else's pocket 90% of the time. If you took your home equity and actually saved it, awesome. I don't begrudge anyone for taking gains. Everyone on the internet is always a winner, so I tend to be a bit skeptical.

BorderPatrol says

the point you are missing is why move to Atlanta when i already make comfortable money and can afford a house easily. that's what my post was responding to

If that's your point I don't get it. The OP has lived in both locations and was giving his perspective of BOTH locations that he HAS lived in. If you had actually lived in ATL, then your point would hold some value if you felt LA was better. As the conversation sits now, you haven't lived in ATL, so not sure how you can say one is better than the other having only lived in one.

BorderPatrol says
completely wrong. i only put down $10K. what tied up money are we talking about here? my housing expenses is $2440 and the rent is $2600. I am SAVING money by buying at the right time.

I asked a question, not sure what's wrong about the question I asked. It could be a bad questions I suppose, but never heard of a wrong question. I also don't care about rent vs. buy. So based on your payment, and down payment, it looks like you went with the $500k house. Congrats. You made the right choice.

Or did you buy something else? Not sure what type of loan product you got, seems like a very low down payment to me. Actually at 3.5% down FHA ($10k) that would be a $285k mortgage... in Orange County mind you. Good for you if you found a house that will go FHA for that price point in Orange County and then proceeded to have it appreciate $160k in 5 years without spending a dime on improvements for that appreciation. There is a lightening strike chance of this actually happening, but hey, people get struck by lightening. Maybe you meant $100k down?

BorderPatrol says


feel sorry for people who can afford to buy? LOL. well, i feel sorry for people who can't afford to buy and need to throw out a bunch of excuses to justify themselves.

Not sure I follow? $10k down is about as close to not being able to afford a home as I've heard. $10k down is 20% on a $50k loan which most lenders don't even dick around with unless it's a minority neighborhood to keep their shit in order. I know you said you won't respond anymore, but I'm not following. Some explanation would be appreciated on how you went about purchasing your home in one of the highest COLA's in the world with only $10k.

BorderPatrol says
people bragging about private schools, all cash purchase for a house. why is only my "bragging" in question? sounds like the bias is strong. one thing you don't realize, nobody believes me just like nobody believes someone had $250K in cash to buy a house, when they could have used it for a down payment in CA. you actually HELP proved my point.

I'm actually with you on this for the most part. You both kind of bragged. Kudos to catching yourself on it. No bias here. Modesty is the best policy if you ask me.

BorderPatrol says
then why are you even responding to my post? if i'm happy with what i'm doing?

Because he had commentary on two places he has ACTUALLY lived. You proceeded to bash ATL having not lived there. Not sure if I can make that much clearer. I love the LA area and all of southern CA from my visits and don't really know ATL. I can't comment intelligently on living in either location so I won't. That's basically the bottom line here. Be happy you even have the opportunity to live in America. It could be FAR worse for you.

I also think your $10k down and $160k appreciation in Orange County story has some holes. So there's that.
84   WookieMan   2018 Jan 22, 6:04pm  

BorderPatrol says
and many people chose to make money long term leveraging, staying where they are, without having to move to a worse neighborhoods.

How do you even know what his neighborhood is like? This is starting to get a little nauseating.

BorderPatrol says

joshuatrio says
And you only qualify for a $1million dollar mortgage? LOL!!!!

and you only had $250K for a house? LOL!!! if i paid cash in Atlanta I would have been able to buy a much better house. i have looked at Atlanta market. $250K is rental home quality.

Not sure why things have to get so nasty. Live in the house you like. That goes for both you guys. The only thing I'll say is that the less you pay for a house in rent or mortgage, you'll likely do much better than your peers. If you want to spend $2M on a house and can do it, cool. If you can spend $2M on a house and only actually spend $100k on your purchase, cool. We all end up dead in the end, so not sure what the point is of measuring your dick when it comes to housing.
85   NewGuy   2018 Jan 22, 6:24pm  

Because if you live in CA probably 45% of you identity is what kind of housing you can afford and another 45% is what tech company you work at and every conversation devolves into 1 of these two topics.

It’s exhausting. I love living in a state where people just buy a house to live in and don’t constantly have to talk about it.

Also, this was a fun thread making fun of how crappy CA is until you CA people showed up and ruined it as usual.
86   DryMap   2018 Jan 22, 7:26pm  

Living anywhere else in the USA but coastal CA or NYC is a career failure!
87   anonymous   2018 Jan 22, 7:28pm  

joshuatrio says
It gets old paying $25-36,000 in rent for a DUMP (where we were in CA)


Meh - keep in mind our host has been doing just this for two plus decades now...
88   NewGuy   2018 Jan 22, 7:48pm  

Is he still doing that? Jeez, I feel bad. Patrick, save yourself! Get out while you still can!
89   WookieMan   2018 Jan 22, 8:01pm  

NewGuy says
Is he still doing that? Jeez, I feel bad. Patrick, save yourself! Get out while you still can!

He's doing what works for him. Don't feel bad. I know you're talking more about location then owning or renting, or so I believe. This is the gist of my prior comments. If Patrick digs his location and lifestyle, not really anyone else's place to tell him it's right or wrong. Not saying you're doing this, but this exact thread kind of went that way. If people are happy, who really cares? People will be happy in SFBA, LA, NYC, KC, OKC or ATL. This will ALWAYS be the case.

Would I personally like warmer weather where I'm at right now? Sure. But my current life situation and family circumstances are better than 98% of the average American in the US. I could bitch about my minor inconveniences or just embrace that 99.9999999999999% of the worlds population has it no where close to as good as I do. Have fun. Love life. It's not forever.
90   Ceffer   2018 Jan 22, 8:07pm  

NewGuy says
Also, this was a fun thread making fun of how crappy CA is until you CA people showed up and ruined it as usual.


Hey, that's what we do! Day isn't complete unless you've made somebody else's life even a bit more miserable, it's the California way.
91   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2018 Jan 22, 8:08pm  

Where do 10 dislikes come from for a topic like this? I think someone has too many anon accounts and too much time on their hands.
92   WatermelonUniversity   2018 Jan 22, 8:17pm  

WookieMan says
That said it's not worth researching.


precisely why some don't care to respond. because it's not worth their time.
93   WatermelonUniversity   2018 Jan 22, 8:24pm  

NewGuy says
Because if you live in CA probably 45% of you identity is what kind of housing you can afford and another 45% is what tech company you work at and every conversation devolves into 1 of these two topics.


quite a grotesque stereotype of Californians and it smells like jealousy.
94   WookieMan   2018 Jan 22, 8:41pm  

BorderPatrol says
WookieMan says
That said it's not worth researching.


precisely why some don't care to respond. because it's not worth their time.

Cool.
95   WookieMan   2018 Jan 22, 8:54pm  

BorderPatrol says
because it's not worth their time.

I missed this the first time around. You do see the hypocrisy in this statement, right?
96   WookieMan   2018 Jan 22, 9:02pm  

Since @BorderPatrol won't do it. Can someone explain how you can purchase a home with $10k down in one of the highest COLA's in the world? Simple stuff. Should I ask Logan on this one? Or should common sense overcome a lie?
97   NewGuy   2018 Jan 22, 9:20pm  

I lived there 10 years. Bought a nice house in San Mateo. Was so glad when my transfer got approved. Now I live in a much nicer house, in a much nicer area and am much happier. No jealousy here friend.

I do have to say, it is certainly true that different people like different things. I am sure there are some people that might actually like CA.

But I also know numerous people that have left the state like myself and are happier. I guess if anything I’m mad that California especially the Bay Area became what it is, because there is a lot to like about it, but a lot has been ruined.

When housing costs ridiculous and you have to send your kids to private school and taxes are out of control yet you don’t see much benefit and you feel intimidated to even mention such wild conservative ideas like “maybe we shouldn’t let homeless people shit on the street” (non CA people are going to find this hard to believe but I literally had arguments with multiple people for voicing such a hateful opinion)... It just got old for me, especially once I had kids.

But yeah, the weather is okay, and I miss the burritos. Also it was cool being the first to get the latest tech. You also felt kind of plugged into something special being around so many smart engineers. Now all my neighbors are doctors and lawyers and over all I prefer this mix but they don’t know how to configure their routers and you can’t talk to them about the Meltdown vulnerability. Yet I am like a tech god to them.

I think it’s all the smart people and that feeling that you’re in the middle of something important that keeps people there. But it wasn’t enough for me anymore.

I don’t think the Bay Area will get back to what it was. I don’t think the new people there even know it used to be better. They just live with their roommates and work in their shared workspaces and hope they can save up enough to put a down payment on a house in Gillroy. But that’s good enough for some I guess.
98   krc   2018 Jan 22, 10:36pm  

For whatever it is worth:
https://realestate.usnews.com/places/rankings/best-places-to-live
Though, honestly, I don't see how Milwaukee ranks higher than ATL. That seems wrong...

Probably why some of the cities in the bay area ranked so high is because of the job engine here. I didn't look too closely at how they ranked by each sub-category.
99   WatermelonUniversity   2018 Jan 23, 12:23am  

krc says
And, so, I guess I just think CA real estate is a better long term value, though time will tell on that.


CA certainly is a much better purchase long term. even Los Angeles gains 5.8% a year (https://www.neighborhoodscout.com/ca/los-angeles/real-estate). buying in places like Atlanta may sound like a good idea now, because the numbers "make sense." but in 20-30 years from now everyone will wish they bought in CA. in 30 years a $500K house in LA will be worth $2.7M and the same house in Atlanta will be worth $960K. the total property taxes paid in CA will be much less as well if prop 13 remains.

krc says
For whatever it is worth:
https://realestate.usnews.com/places/rankings/best-places-to-live
Though, honestly, I don't see how Milwaukee ranks higher than ATL. That seems wrong...

Probably why some of the cities in the bay area ranked so high is because of the job engine here. I didn't look too closely at how they ranked by each sub-category.


interesting list although I think LA should be a lot higher in the ranking. people always say where they live is the best due to various intangible, emotional, unmeasurable factors. well the only thing that's measurable is appreciation or rate of return for your money and CA wins hands down!
100   WookieMan   2018 Jan 23, 7:30am  

BorderPatrol says
NewGuy says
Because if you live in CA probably 45% of you identity is what kind of housing you can afford and another 45% is what tech company you work at and every conversation devolves into 1 of these two topics.


quite a grotesque stereotype of Californians and it smells like jealousy.

Have you lived anywhere else besides CA? If not, you should probably stop commenting on how people feel after they have moved. You do realize your are telling someone else that their own feelings, opinions & experiences are wrong? NewGuy & Joshuatrio have ACTUALLY lived in different places. While anecdotal, their opinion holds more weight than someone that has only lived in CA. This is what we would call a bias.

And you're of course free to hold your biased opinion. Just understand that people won't take you seriously in the future.

I'm also still waiting on how this

WookieMan says
I also think your $10k down and $160k appreciation in Orange County story has some holes. So there's that.


is possible. I know it's hard to read longer comments and I apologize for my style of writing being long winded. But I did post a shorter comment above on it's own with the same question. If you made up that you bought a $285k house in the LA area that's fine, I don't care honestly. I just want to know if there are deals I'm missing out on. I'd be in CA in flash for that price if it's a neighborhood that's even remotely worth living in with the income my wife and I could make out there.
101   anonymous   2018 Jan 23, 7:43am  

Obviously that list is nonsense because many CA cities are at the top. This cannot be.

The correct one should have the lowest home prices on top, other factors don’t matter.

krc says
For whatever it is worth:
https://realestate.usnews.com/places/rankings/best-places-to-live
Though, honestly, I don't see how Milwaukee ranks higher than ATL. That seems wrong...

Probably why some of the cities in the bay area ranked so high is because of the job engine here. I didn't look too closely at how they ranked by each sub-category.
102   FortWayne   2018 Jan 23, 8:32am  

BorderPatrol says
CA certainly is a much better purchase long term. even Los Angeles gains 5.8% a year (https://www.neighborhoodscout.com/ca/los-angeles/real-estate). buying in places like Atlanta may sound like a good idea now, because the numbers "make sense." but in 20-30 years from now everyone will wish they bought in CA. in 30 years a $500K house in LA will be worth $2.7M and the same house in Atlanta will be worth $960K. the total property taxes paid in CA will be much less as well if prop 13 remains.


Just living in CA for a long time, I can tell you that it doesn't work out quite like that. Those who truly cashed out are the once who bought before the housing prices speculation that occurred Clinton/Bush. Left the state to retire in cheaper CoL states. Now everything has appreciation priced in, and since property taxes are no longer a write off, you can imagine it's going to make buying in CA a bad proposition.

I know people who bought at high prices, many of them already foreclosed and moved out of state. It's hard to pay your entire salary into mortgage for 30 years consistently. Rest are holding on to it begrudgingly. Only few made it ok, that's the people who simply made a lot more money to afford their gamble. Very few happy people in that group, they paid too much and stretched themselves thin.

Just sharing what I see, I'm sure not everyone has the same perspective.
103   anonymous   2018 Jan 23, 8:41am  

BorderPatrol says
i only put down $10K. what tied up money are we talking about here? my housing expenses is $2440


Based on CA home prices, that sounds like a very nice double wide that you own. What does the mobile home park charge for monthly HOA fees, or is that included in the $2440?
104   MisdemeanorRebel   2018 Jan 23, 9:07am  

I told my wife I won't spend $350k on a South Florida house, because the price is all baked in and the chances of a huge tech boom employing tens of thousands and running up demand so that a modest 60s/70s home goes up to $700k in the next decade or so are minimal. Unlike California which has the open space and 'low density' scams in play by the powers-that-be, Floridian developers are trying to knock out the Sugar Industry to build more, more, more, and tall condos are the order of the day.

Thinking about buying studios on the water more up the coast in beachfront buildings. .

Plus, you can actually swim in the water.
105   WookieMan   2018 Jan 23, 9:11am  

FortWayne says
Just sharing what I see, I'm sure not everyone has the same perspective.

FortWayne, since you're in the area, have you seen a move in ready house (zero deferred maintenance and can pass an FHA appraisal/inspection) for $285k anywhere around you in the last 5 years? A claim has been made here that $10k was put up as a down payment and six figures of equity was generated from that in 5 years. FHA loans are basically the lowest down payment unless one is a veteran, but $10k down at 3.5% would be $285k purchase price.

Can't say I've heard of that in recent times in the LA area, but I'm in Chicago and don't actively look all that often. Maybe during the crash I suppose in a crappy area. But definitely not now in a neighborhood or house worth living in. Who knows, I don't know the area so maybe it's a possibility.

Apparently my writing here is too long, so I'm not getting a response from the person that made this claim. So figured I'd ask you if you had seen a deal like that.

Plus I just looked up above at the quote from an anon in comment 103 with the $2,440 housing expense claim (forgot about that part), on a $285k FHA loan from 5 years ago (this is the only way you can put down only $10k on a home purchase pretty much). He must have had really bad credit or something and got hit with a high rate. My payment calculations based off the down payment amount and about the only loan you could get for that amount down put it at about $1,600-$1,700/mo with $2k annual of prop. taxes and $750 for insurance and $118/mo for FHA PMI.

Takes about 9-10% interest rate to hit that monthly payment number of $2,440. Needless to say, FHA rates weren't at that level 5 years ago. I know this was another long one, but the ship has sank and I now fully understand the non-response. It was made up. It's okay to own being wrong, people won't think less of you. I just don't get the point of the story in the first place. I'm not sure what was gained.
106   Ceffer   2018 Jan 23, 9:45am  

What's old is new again. I remember the same claims in Cali in the 90's. Then, prices crashed. In upper middle class neighborhoods in the Tri Valley, houses would stay on the market for more than two years without selling. Those houses now sell off the blocks, often for cash, right away.

Double wide haul-out old trailers in trailer parks, and even some single wides, are going for $285K in Santa Cruz right now. You can't even get anything in Tracy anymore for less than 360k to 400k for over 1500 sq. ft.
107   anonymous   2018 Jan 23, 9:49am  

TwoScoopsPlissken says
I told my wife I won't spend $350k on a South Florida house, because the price is all baked in and the chances of a huge tech boom employing tens of thousands and running up demand so that a modest 60s/70s home goes up to $700k in the next decade or so are minimal. Unlike California which has the open space and 'low density' scams in play by the powers-that-be, Floridian developers are trying to knock out the Sugar Industry to build more, more, more, and tall condos are the order of the day.

Thinking about buying studios on the water more up the coast in beachfront buildings. .

Plus, you can actually swim in the water.


Approaching 70k med card apps with 45k cards already printed

Dilly dilly
108   Ironworker   2018 Jan 23, 12:29pm  

SF Bay Area is not a shithole. It’s beautiful.

But if you don’t make at least $250K and most likelly much more, you’ll live in a shithole. Your kids will go to shitty schools, you’ll be constantly strapped on time, you’ll face lot of crime.

So yes - shithole. I’m slowly working to get out of here.
109   anonymous   2018 Jan 23, 1:22pm  

Ironworker says
But if you don’t make at least $250K


=> career failure
110   Patrick   2018 Jan 23, 1:27pm  

FortWayne says
Very few happy people in that group, they paid too much and stretched themselves thin.


I know lots of people in the Bay Area who overpaid and got burned, including two families with kids, bankrupted by their mortgage and had to move.

Looking forward to seeing the new limitations on mortgage interest deduction bring prices more into range for ordinary people with savings.
111   BayArea   2018 Jan 23, 1:38pm  

Patrick says
FortWayne says
Very few happy people in that group, they paid too much and stretched themselves thin.


I know lots of people in the Bay Area who overpaid and got burned, including two families with kids, bankrupted by their mortgage and had to move.

Looking forward to seeing the new limitations on mortgage interest deduction bring prices more into range for ordinary people with savings.


In theory it should. But I see no sign of it yet here on the Peninsula.
112   NewGuy   2018 Jan 23, 1:41pm  

A few people on this thread have made comments about the housing appreciation in the Bay Area being a good thing and a good reason to invest in housing there and the lack of housing appreciation in other places a bad thing.

The price of housing is either governed by fundamentals (the rent it generates, the value of the shelter it provides) or it is governed by expectations of future value gains.

The second way of thinking is a bubble mentality. I’m surprised so many people have fallen for this again so soon after the last crash. Be careful. There’s only so much people can afford to pay for your house, don’t be left holding the bag.

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