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Zillow just increased the 'value' of my crap shack by $200K in the past month
I kinda suspected NuttBoxer wont give us any cogent answers :)
(*) Patrick and others have pointed out on this thread and others about the massive "ownership premium" folks will pay who buy now, for the "privilege" of owning a crapshack in our region. It's insane. I see it on the real estate websites like Zillow all the time. The monthly cost for buying a 50-60 year old crap shack at present will be nearly 2x what they say it would collect for rent. This is insane.
For years I was paying less in rent than my landlord was paying in PITI+HOA. And HOA was not trivial because it was a condo, not SFH. One year the HOA management company was replaced by different one which "found shortfall" and promptly jacked up monthly HOA fee by $400 (not to $400, by $400!). I, of course, didn't chip in a single red cent.
super commuters from faraway places like Stockton, Modesto, Hollister, Los Banos ... commute cost ... hours wasted
For years I was paying less in rent than my landlord was paying in PITI+HOA.
Eric Holder saysFor years I was paying less in rent than my landlord was paying in PITI+HOA. And HOA was not trivial because it was a condo, not SFH. One year the HOA management company was replaced by different one which "found shortfall" and promptly jacked up monthly HOA fee by $400 (not to $400, by $400!). I, of course, didn't chip in a single red cent.
Thank you, landlord, for the Housing Subsidy.
NuttBoxer saysAs long as it's cheaper. My rent was $1375 back then, and it's $1600 now. If I bought would have been around $1900 plus maintenance.
Are you jealous that I've saved money and been able to enjoy my life without committing to a huge debt? Or maybe stories like mine are bad for your bottom line... Logan.
Alright, lets see if we get a meaningful conversation going. I kinda doubt it but I'll give it a shot.
Your rent was 1375 in 2011? Location? What type of rental, bedrooms, sqft?
Its now 1600? Same criteria as above or different?
Your mortgage in 2011 would have been 1900? Where, with what DP, what house, details pls.
How does the word jealous even fit into this situation: that you chose not to buy a house in 2011 and missed out during the most epic RE bull run in history?! buddy.....but lets wait for your answers.
Personally, the #1 decision to make is whether or not you're willing to jab your kids. EVERYTHING else revolves around that. Let us know when you've made that decision.I’m not willing. Ever.
WineHorror1 saysPersonally, the #1 decision to make is whether or not you're willing to jab your kids. EVERYTHING else revolves around that. Let us know when you've made that decision.I’m not willing. Ever.
Go further out, gets cheaper. We are not going to expensive area, suburb about 40 min from city. That’s what I’d recommend.
We are leaving CA too, will be gone in a few month. No more gay shit pushed onto kids, no tranny shit pushed by militant left wing teachers, no vaccine mandates, less taxes. We will miss good friends too, but we had to make these sacrifices for our children.
Either way the time will fly and next thing you know you're sitting in a $1.5M big house with just your spouse.
Fortwaynemobile saysGo further out, gets cheaper. We are not going to expensive area, suburb about 40 min from city. That’s what I’d recommend.
We are leaving CA too, will be gone in a few month. No more gay shit pushed onto kids, no tranny shit pushed by militant left wing teachers, no vaccine mandates, less taxes. We will miss good friends too, but we had to make these sacrifices for our children.
Where did you end up picking?
I'm not at the stage in life with high schoolers, but if you've got them in local schools for 4 years or less, I'd get a townhome. 3 Bed, 3 bath with den/office. I prefer and have suggested rural, but why not get something mostly maintenance free and enjoy the remaining years your kids will be with you? If you like the place stay or rent it out if it's a desirable area and you no longer want to stay after the kids are out. Easier to sell a townhome if you don't like the area. Higher "floor" as far as possible losses with a townhome as well. 10% drop on $1.2M home is different than a 10% drop on a $500k townhome. Visiting is different that living there so who knows.Good advice. Thanks.
Either way the time will fly and next thing you know you're sitting in a $1.5M big house with just your spouse. With under 4 years left with kids in the house (unless they boomerang) I'd be super hesitant in dropping that much in a new area. I'd get a newish townhome and then a 1-2 bed in the Caribbean or ...
So I'm getting a 3x increase on the full purchase price of the house minus the interest I paid on the mortgage verses the S&P 500 gain I would realize by dollar-cost-averaging stock purchase over the last 20 years.There's something else to be added to this: past performance is not an indicator of the future performance. This applies to both housing and S&P500. Ideally you'd have both, somewhat evenly matched in value. Because diversification.
Good advice. Thanks.I’d advise against a townhome, unless fully detached. You are really rolling the dice on having a decent neighbor or not. Even if you meet the neighbors before you buy and they seem decent, they can move or turn out to be A holes. A house on your own plot is less risky.
the only house he would buy is one where he can walk entirely around the house.
Yes, a friend of my dad's said that the only house he would buy is one where he can walk entirely around the house. At the time it sounded odd to me, but now I understand.
That’s what we got in Idaho
I'm sorry I didn't weigh in PCE but I don't think I have any advice to offer on a 1.5 million dollar spread.Thanks TPB. Just curious...why do you hate FL?
Eventually I would like to get the hell out of Florida, I would have been gone by now, if not for DeSantis. I don't think I'll ever be able to pull the wife out of here.
She has her Sisters here, and our three adult daughters live here. I would like to buy a rural spread and give our two young boys a farm upbringing.
I may keep the SF house, and move between the two. Snowbird in SF perhaps.
Fortwaynemobile saysThat’s what we got in Idaho
According to Benjamin Fulford, when the Biden regime finally implodes on itself and falls apart from internal corruptions and the US Corporation is laid to rest decisively, and the foreign occupied foreign city state of Washington DC is flushed, then Idaho may become the location of the new capital of the re-constituted USA, because heartland rather than slave of Euro conspiracies. He also thinks there is a chance of Canada or large segments thereof and Mexico joining a union. The British Commonwealth has expired, and even Australia may eventually join a union.
This all sounds a bit dodgy hopium to me, but no more strange than the actual unwinding events of the last couple of years.
Not sure about that, but thanks for the compliment. I still believe we're headed for economic pain and the price of my house will go down, but I plan on living there for a long time. If I get into investment properties/rentals, this coming recession will be gold for those with extra cash to pounce.
porkchopexpress sayssmallpox pandemic.
Appears that you have excellent prediction skills
this coming recession will be gold for those with extra cash to pounce.
Anyone still wanting to buy a house near Nashville? My acquaintance is selling his in Greenbrier. 5 bed, 5k sqf. New construction with a lot of extras.
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/139-Empson-Dr-Greenbrier-TN-37073/80375447_zpid/
Interesting, the asking price is nearly triple from what it sold at in 2015.
Anyone still wanting to buy a house near Nashville? My acquaintance is selling his in Greenbrier. 5 bed, 5k sqf. New construction with a lot of extras.
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We all decided that the Nashville area (i.e., Franklin/Brentwood) is where we'd all agree to move this Summer, but the house prices are INSANE. We've only ever rented and she will NOT agree to moving to another rental; she wants to buy. So, I'm stuck between stretching ourselves a bit to buy a $1.4M home in Nashville area, or staying in our current rental but making our boys get the vaccine to stay in school. My boys are already bummed about the thought of switching high schools, so they'd be willing to get the vaccine to stay in their current school. I feel like I'm alone in fighting against the easier path, which is clearly staying put in our current place until they finish school.
What would you guys do?
P.S. Given the no state income tax and the down payment I've saved up, I could theoretically make a $1.4M work but it's beyond what I'd prefer to pay. I'm also scared shitless that housing is going to crash, but what if it doesn't?