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calculating monthly cost of owning a home


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2011 Jun 22, 4:54am   17,077 views  47 comments

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I am trying to build a spreadsheet to calculate the monthly carrying costs of a home.

Here is what I have:

1) mortgage (easy to calculate)
2) home owners insurance ( ~1000 / year, is this reasonable ?)
3) property tax (easy to calculate using county's tax rate)
4) special assesments / parcel tax ..etc. These are special taxes for supporting schools ..etc. (how do I calculate this?)
5) HOA (easy)
6) maintanance (is this around 1% of home value / year? )
7) any other costs I shoudl consider?

any tips appreciated

thanks

#housing

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45   corntrollio   2011 Jun 28, 10:59am  

The rich people who own should definitely rent the identical house for half as much, but it would just be too embarassing for them. They would lose social status.

You are correct, Patrick, because sometimes there is an informal ceiling on rents, even on the high end. For example, there aren't that many rentals in San Francisco with a rent above $10K, even though the cost to buy would be significantly more than $10K for some of those houses.

The other factor to consider, however, is that the potential rental pool at these levels is incredibly shallow. I have no problem finding a well-built, renovated, 2-4 BR house for rent in most of the Bay Area, but a mansion or other luxury property is a different story. There really aren't many rental options at this level, so people buy for that reason too.

46   Patrick   2011 Jun 28, 11:17am  

From what I read, there are actually a lot of high-end rentals in NYC. Wonder why it isn't that way in SF.

47   Â¥   2011 Jun 28, 3:54pm  

SHE wants a house, and it’s YOUR job to buy it for her, cost be damned. Not PC, but I honestly believe that’s how it works for most people.

I joked about the "nesting" instinct at my friend's housewarming party in the Sunset in mid-2000. I thought they were buying rather late in the cycle, and was right, until the damn market got reset with Greenspan's post 9/11 interest rates and all the mortgage craziness.

How's this for a synopsis of the market:

May 25, 2011 Sold (Public Records) $530,000 -2.5%/yr
Oct 27, 2004 Sold (Public Records) $627,000 6.9%/yr
Apr 27, 2000 Sold (Public Records) $465,000 27.5%/yr
Aug 06, 1997 Sold (Public Records) $240,000 0.7%/yr
May 02, 1991 Sold (Public Records) $230,000 --

they made a good flip and moved to a more family-friendly nabe in 2004.

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