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Affordable housing is something a single person making $75,000 or less can afford, whether it be rent or mortgage.
Given that we are trying to get to a $15 hourly rate for people, times that by 40 hours a week and you get $600. Thats $2,400 a month to live on before taxes are taken out. Even if there are 2 people making that much thats still only $4,800. So they should be able to find decent housing that they can afford and still have money to feed and clothe themselves and possible children. I do not have a degree but only make $50,000. I will probably never make much more. Between my spouse and I we make $130,00 and consider ourselves fortunate. |
NP here. I can kinda see where "very easy" PP is coming from. I was a GS-14 at 30 and my DH was a 12. So, that's almost at the 200k HHI. BUT, we had two kids in daycare when I was in my 30s and that's like a whole additional mortgage payment. So, 200k HHI with a high mortgage is unreasonable in this area if also paying for daycare. |
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Affordable is making the note/rent easily, paying utilities and your other bills without stress, not cutting back on food, having leftover money to split between checking, savings ie emergency fund and some money to go out and do things once in a while or to buy shoes and clothes. Factor in more for spouse and kids.
What most people do though is allow others to tell them what they can afford instead of working the numbers themselves. No one factors in what ifs. Like property taxes going up, upkeep, insurance going up, sickness, job loss, death. It happens. Most people are so set on I need to buy a house they don't think through what it involves then you end up arguing about money because there is none. Not worth it. If you think it through and factor in all the what ifs and you can afford it then do it. Just know the bank is counting on you to struggle and they'll be there to take that house and resell, resell, resell... My oldest didn't factor in a job loss. His wife HAD to have a home. Brand new. They lost the house recently. Some learn the hard way. |
| Childcare is a luxury. Years ago I worked MasterCard in operations which is 24/7. The clerks married with kids worked separate shifts so no childcare. Often I see teachers, nurses and cops doing different shoots or one spouse stays home or works part time. I even see moms stay home and watch 2-3 other kids. Often the grandparents do it |
Some people, somewhere, have options. That's awesome. And completely irrelevant to the dual-income families in this area. |
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Couple quick points interesting discussion
Again in DC a 200k HHI for two college graduates or one person if you do the have one focus solely on career is what it takes to be sustainable in the DC area Again there are tons of places in the country for people that aren't going to reach those thresholdes no shame in that except probably the DC area doesn't make economic sense for you to live here I agree child care costs are expensive here but remember they are temporary (along with student loans) and your income is going to keep going up over time while the mortgage stays much more flat. Point being for many people it is tight in the beginning but it gets easier over time And finally to the $15 per hour poster. 1 that's a minimum wage people should be aspiring to move up in their career and 2 see point 1 the DC area has a very high cost of living. People don't have the right to live anywhere in the country especially if they are content with a minimum wage and no thought of moving up and improving themselves. But even if people still want to make those choices there are tons of places across the country where decent housing is still under 100-150k and it can work just not in HCOL of living areas like Seattle, SF, LA, Denver, Boston, NYC and DC |
Wow. We're at $300HHI, no debt, kids in public schools and $650K is our Max. $4000/month is a huge payment. |
Govt open 24/7. My firm even white collar folks can work either 7-3 or 10-7 with one day work from home . That would be only 15-16 hours a week child care |
| We bought a $365K house a few years ago and that was affordable for us. The limit of our budget was $450K but that would have been a big stretch. We bought in PG. |
I am a teacher. A Master's is pretty much the minimum at this point. |
I am very comfortable on $130k. You people are insane |
assuming you are single so yeah 130k is perfectly fine for a single person benchmark would be around 100k less if you have roommates which would be highly recommended |
Oh good grief. We are a family of 4 that gets by quite comfortably on just a bit more than that. Get your head out of your ass. |
| Consider two incomes and how much people can save. |
| We're early 30's with an HHI of $160k, and to us $400k felt affordable when we were looking last year. We wound up stretching to $440k when we bought because an opportunity popped up in an neighborhood that we really liked but had written off as being out of reach. Its "affordable" now- meaning that we can still go out for dinner, drinks etc... and take a couple of modest vacations a year, and will feel truly comfortable once the damn student loans are paid off, and our renovation finished. |