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90% luck 10% location.With luck like that, that person should have just bought a lottery ticket.
Potential example.I don't know anyone who rented a place for 7 years and then made 6 figures when they left.
it's the capitalistic method of keeping a docile, preoccupied, permanent middle class to sodomize for taxes and votes.
It's those darned Madison Avenue intangibles that spur ya . . .Potential example.
Renting is a flat rate so say $1500 a month. Ostensibly you are paying nothing for maintenance, nothing for landscaping, and you aren't making any improvement. Things tend to be funkier but you are more inclined to live with them.
So $18,000 a year total.
$18,000x7 = $126,000
$250,000 house at 6.5%, 20% down on a 30.
$50,000 down payment
$3,000 closing costs
Owning $1500 monthly payment loan + insurance . Then landscaping + maintenance + improvements = $2000
So $20,000 a year
Own for 7 years
$20,000x7 = $140,000
Remaining loan = $180,832.49
Principle Payed off $19,168
Sell the house for $350,000
- $30,000 agent fees, concessions, etc.
-$180,832 remaining loan
-$140,000
-$3,000 original closing costs
= -$3,832
So you lived almost free for 7 years
Renting
-$126,000
Invest $50,000 + invest money not spent on repairs/landscaping etc. $166 a month.
$100,000-$115,000 depending on market.
At year 7
$-26,000 to $-11,000
So if you sold your house for $100,000 more than what you purchased it for after 7 years you likely only beat renting by $5-20K. If you had to do anything major then you absolutely lost money.
In my case I need to do an entire new Furnace/AC system on top of the DIY stuff. Pretty tough for me to come out ahead of renting. Really only way to get my money back would be to hold onto the house and rent it out... but that assumes I can make enough money to have another down payment... which doubtful.
I'm 100% paying for lifestyle, it's not an investment, it's not a smart money decision.
1. Never treat your home as an investment, it's where you live, and you can't realize any gains without not living there.I'm 100% paying for lifestyle, it's not an investment, it's not a smart money decision.
Here we go...Potential example.
Renting is a flat rate so say $1500 a month. Ostensibly you are paying nothing for maintenance, nothing for landscaping, and you aren't making any improvement. Things tend to be funkier but you are more inclined to live with them.
So $18,000 a year total.
$18,000x7 = $126,000
$250,000 house at 6.5%, 20% down on a 30.
$50,000 down payment
$3,000 closing costs
Owning $1500 monthly payment loan + insurance . Then landscaping + maintenance + improvements = $2000
So $20,000 a year
Own for 7 years
$20,000x7 = $140,000
Remaining loan = $180,832.49
Principle Payed off $19,168
Sell the house for $350,000
- $30,000 agent fees, concessions, etc.
-$180,832 remaining loan
-$140,000
-$3,000 original closing costs
= -$3,832
So you lived almost free for 7 years
Renting
-$126,000
Invest $50,000 + invest money not spent on repairs/landscaping etc. $166 a month.
$100,000-$115,000 depending on market.
At year 7
$-26,000 to $-11,000
So if you sold your house for $100,000 more than what you purchased it for after 7 years you likely only beat renting by $5-20K. If you had to do anything major then you absolutely lost money.
In my case I need to do an entire new Furnace/AC system on top of the DIY stuff. Pretty tough for me to come out ahead of renting. Really only way to get my money back would be to hold onto the house and rent it out... but that assumes I can make enough money to have another down payment... which doubtful.
I'm 100% paying for lifestyle, it's not an investment, it's not a smart money decision.
1. Never treat your home as an investment, it's where you live, and you can't realize any gains without not living there.
2. When has rent stayed the same for 7 years let alone 30? My mortgage will never increase. The next 30 years, it will always stay the same, then at 30 years, I effectively reduce it by 20x and only pay prop taxes. You play the game for the long run, never the short term.
1. Never treat your home as an investment, it's where you live, and you can't realize any gains without not living there.
You need a new roof every what 20, furnace ever 15-25... hot water heater, etc, etc. and while your loan doesn't increase your property taxes will as your home appreciates over time.
1. Never treat your home as an investment, it's where you live, and you can't realize any gains without not living there.
2. When has rent stayed the same for 7 years let alone 30? My mortgage will never increase. The next 30 years, it will always stay the same, then at 30 years, I effectively reduce it by 20x and only pay prop taxes. You play the game for the long run, never the short term.
The better case for home ownership is the one where you reach the point in your life where it is time to transition to a fixed income and you now own your home outright and are not stuck paying a high rent.Potential example.
Renting is a flat rate so say $1500 a month. Ostensibly you are paying nothing for maintenance, nothing for landscaping, and you aren't making any improvement. Things tend to be funkier but you are more inclined to live with them.
Thus the 1927 house @TOGIE was right it is a overrated lifestyle.I'm 100% paying for lifestyle, it's not an investment, it's not a smart money decision.
Insurance/tax increase, and upkeep neutralizes dividend...The better case for home ownership is the one where you reach the point in your life where it is time to transition to a fixed income and you now own your home outright and are not stuck paying a high rent.
I mean if you want to N=1 the topic lolPlus, in some areas of the country rental rates increase almost every year. Like in Portland, even with the explosion of new rental units going up everywhere rental rates keep going up.
Can't decide whether to hire you as an accountant...or a life coach.I mean if you want to N=1 the topic
I paid the same rate for rent for 3 years in Boston and got to write my rent off my state income taxes. Some places have rent controlled units, you also can easily move when renting to find the best price.
Just kinda depends, not really a "correct" answer, but the idea that renting is always a poor choice is inaccurate.
Probably say that I should go #*^@#* myself.What say ye Douglas?
There is also a lot of physical and financial safety in owning your home. You won't get a 30 year fixed rent rate and you also can eventually borrow low interest money against your rental for an emergency. I don't know that now is the time to be buying but I am definitely happy with a sub 4% rate and the safety blanket my home provides me.Insurance/tax increase, and upkeep neutralizes dividend...
It’s south park bro...Probably say that I should go #*^@#* myself.
But it's a Monday so maybe just some racial epithets.