Aah PP I was the snarky one, whether or not you are rich that just sounds like a nightmare. I'm sorry! Better luck next year! |
The benefit is that you can make a lot of money on your house when you sell. Not everyone puts so much money into their homes. But you can always tell which homes are cared for. I have NOT been putting that much into my home, maybe just $4k-$6 a year, but we have lots of deferred maintenance that we have to catch up on. |
For us the benefits include that a house is essentially forced savings. So we live in an area where housing prices keep going up - and we bought an underpriced house in that area. We hope that, barring anything catastrophic, when we sell the house we ill take $100k plus with us. There are also tax benefits. And the psychical benefit of living in a place that's yours. We get to make all the decisions we want to make with this place. When I buy $100 of plants to put in the garden, that's my garden. We can change the fixtures to be whatever we want. That sort of thing. I rented until a few years ago. I was in my early 40s when we bought this house and it's my first house. I would say for me, I like being a homeowner even with the expenses (so far). |
Eh. Checking his paystub in January would have prevented this. |
That’s us. So identical. And we are not rich. |
It's weird you include the taxes here. |
Just after getting a quote to replace disintegrating plumbing, we also have a foundation issue. And taxes due on a rental unit. It is a very pricey month and will wipe out the money I had saved for new windows as we have some very old ones that need replacing. |
If one is a disciplined saver then home ownership is not that good of an investment.
I like having my own home, but I make sure to not waste money on a myriad home improvements that every statistic shows to have a poor return. Lot of these "improvements" are optional. https://www.forbes.com/sites/jamiehopkins/2018/07/28/housing-is-not-a-good-investment-its-a-service/ |
We did our HVAC too. Cost $25k for high end daikin units installation etc. I'm sure a landlord would have stuck us with a cheap haier and jacked up the rent. |
That's another good point. A landlord would have put in the cheapest possible dishwasher when ours broke last year. We got to pick which one we wanted. We aren't HAPPY about all the expenses we've had. But we do love our house. And we hope that it's a good financial instrument in the long run as well. That's basically it. On top of really enjoying where we live, and liking that we get to make the decisions about the place - like which HVAC unit to buy, what colors the walls will be, which ceiling fans we want, etc - we are hopeful that when the day comes to sell it'll put is in a better position than if we'd kept renting. If you're in a situation where you would prefer to pay rent than deal with the expenses and hassle of owning a place - and/or if you think that you are better off saving the $ you'd spend on a mortgage and repairs and upkeep in another instrument - then that's cool, too. I should also add that we no longer live in DC. We moved a few years ago. When we looked at what we could buy in the DC area at the amount we were willing and able to spend, we just didn't see any good prospects. So we rented in DC because we want to live someplace we really like, and our rent went further than a mortgage would have gone for us. We now live in a much lower cost of living city. |