It would need to be an unforeseen move to another city (not happening) or a situation where we would not be taking out another mortgage. We have dropped our anchor in Silver Spring! |
It would have to be an emergency situation to uproot with that sort of mortgage right now. Like mandatory job transfer, or divorce or bankruptcy.
Just to have neighbors that are younger or more social? No way. |
Family emergency (covers a lot of ground - health, financial, etc.)
Fabulous job elsewhere Absent one of those things, we're staying put. Though to be fair, we are a family of three in a small house in a great neighborhood, so we'd be staying put for the time being anyway. Where it may affect us is retirement - we'd long intended to leave DC suburbia and move to a more urban area (maybe DC, maybe elsewhere). But the deal we have on our current place, 2.625%, and the cost of a new place (we are NOT looking at low COL areas), may make that impossible, or at least inadvisable. So, we may end up staying here party time, and spending 6 months a year at our place elsewhere. |
This. You can't be controlled by the rates. May mean less house. But if I wanted to move I would move. |
NP, but OP’s question was asking what made it worth it for some people to give up that rate, and PP responded with exactly that. Hardly irrelevant |
my daughter being born
life isn't all about your mortgage rate. You can always make more money |
We gave up 2.75% on our starter house for 2x the square footage, 4x+ the lot size, excellent instead of bad schools, a cul-de-sac instead of a dangerous intersection, and a house, neighborhood, and town which checked almost all of our “nice to have” boxes so we jumped. Our mortgage is 4x what it was, and it has been amazing. |
The low mortgage rate is literally worth less and less each month. I got a low rate in 2016 and paid points and even now the monthly payment is moving away from interest.
I will move eventually I am retiring in 2028. Who cares about low rate by then |
haha. Easier said than done for the vast majority of people. |
+1 Once your kids are in school their friends likely won’t live next door. Great house, large lot and near a playground with great schools? I’d stay out forever until downsizing |
No one has said anything like this on this thread. Are you always so dramatic? |
Honestly all it will take is the right house in our preferred neighborhood at the right price (we are looking for an older maintained home, currently only new builds are available for $$$more). We've been in this house a long time (we had targeted summer 2020 to move, but didn't want to take a chance when Covid was so prevalent) and we're ready. We know our expenses will go up but we've planned for it and it's right for our family. |
retirement |
We are in this situation. Would need to be able to steal a new construction place on at least a 1/4 acre with a garage and a screened in porch in yorktown district for $2m. Then, we’d likely pay cash. |
We’d sell our house @ 2.65% if I were to get a great job offer in another city or to downsize after the kids are off to college. In the downsize instance, we’d likely use equity to pay cash or take out a very small mortgage. |