| ^^ you can house hop into a couple more because they rent easily . You can have 3 easy rentals and be on your way to building wealth . |
| X'er here. eBought in 2004 on U street. Use the equity in that house and money from savings to buy another house in U, , then 2 in Adams Morgan and then 2 in Kalorama Triangle. Managed to do this before market collapse. Rented them all out and now out and now have over 30k of positive cash flow a month. Just have to look for opportunity and be decisive when you find it. |
So you did all that back when OP was a freshman in high school, but you think good advice is "look for opportunity and be decisive?" |
Meh. Then you do you. We're moving from a townhouse this year in S. Arlington after 6 years and taking our $175k of equity to plug into the down payment of a sfh |
Where are you buying? We bought a sfh in s arl back in '09. |
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Alright I'm an "old millennial" born in the 80s. But we bought a townhouse in Hyattsville/University Park area. We bought the biggest model. At 6 years out we made >$60k profit. We took that plus savings for a down payment on a SFH. You need to think that you will probably not be able to put 20% down but you can still get great rates and loans and purchase. You need to think outside the box in location but still think of the realities of the purchase- i.e. appraisals are based on square footage, #bedrooms and #bathrooms. Buy the 4bd 3.5bath over the 3bd 1.5bath in the same neighborhood.
If I can make a recommendation- University Park is selling townhomes brand new by the new Whole Foods. If I were in the market I'd buy that in a heartbeat. Prices in the mid400s, walkable to WF, good elementary and inside beltway. |
All these examples about purchases fine without 20% down, we are returning to the bed all day as it sounds like. Or least reminiscing about them. People should be buying the 20% down and fixed rate mortgage is, anything else is taken more risk than most buyers can handle sure works out fine in another market, but any hiccup and then you are on the under water and it snowballed from there. |
| ^ ^ ^ I really think we are really far from AI taking oversince Siri can't even transpose correctly. |
You do realize this isn't the case for everyone, right? |
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Less than 20% down is not returning to the prebubble days. Back then you didn't actually have to qualify- you could have a questionable salary, employment record, etc and still be approved.
Less than 20% down in the D.C. Metro area - especially in a walkable community- especially where other development is occurring is absolutely fine. Obviously there are contributing factors and you must qualify. But to just make a blanket statement that anything less is failure is ridiculous. |
+1 We borrowed from our 401k and scraped together the rest. Didn't buy furniture for the first year or two. We also busted our a$$ at work to build our careers/salaries. |
Let me ask you both a question? Does being so nasty come to you naturally? The op NEVER said the world owes her a house. She is concerned that the timing has just not worked out for her and that she will never get ahead. We have an entire social and financial system set up that encourages and rewards home ownership. Maybe it doesn't work out for everybody, but you two ninnies acting like this pressure/perception doesn't exist doesn't help. Why not try less of an assholio response, like: "I know it sucks, but sometimes, the timing doesn't work out. Try not to let it get to you and make other good financial decisions so that someday it will work out." Really consider why your default setting is to go ugly, while you're at it. |
First post that makes sense. |
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One of our kids just got married and built a beautiful home (nicer than the one he grew up in), at the age of 27. They graduated from college and landed a decent, not great, job. It paid for grad school. After that, they moved to a better job, with a promotion, because it relocated them to a place to live with a better quality of life. Both of them worked for the same company. They were bringing in lots of money, maxed out retirement funds, drove the same little cars they bought after college and did not go wild spending. One of them was picked up by another company in their field and is doing very well. They work hard. Constantly keep current in their field. Go to great grad schools and work for companies that pay for their education. And they have priorities and don't care what everyone else has or is doing.
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It only makes sense in Bizarro world where people don't know how to actually read the OP. I feel bad for people coming into the market now. It is tough. Hang in there, OP. We are all given different timelines. Work on saving now and investing. Someday, the timing will be right. |