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1. A lot of people had help. They had no student loans or they had parents that helped with a down payment.
2. A lot of people started with a condo or something smaller and were able to sell at a profit to buy something bigger. Or better yet, a couple both sold something for a bigger down payment. 3. A lot of people bought when things were cheaper and were able to sell at a profit for a bigger down payment or kept the first place and rented for more than the cost of the mortgage to offset the new more expensive mortgage. 4. A lot of people rent part of the house (basement) or have/had housemates. 5. A lot of people make a lot of money in this area. Or had a trust fund or an inheritance. |
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PP here. Should have included -
6. A lot of people were in the military which gave them a leg up through VA loan or housing in cheaper areas which they sold to help buy here or lived overseas and were able to put away money until they got here. |
| Just did a quick Zillow scan and there are tons of homes in south Arlington, Baileys, Alexandria, suitland, Largo, etc. under $700k. That’s where you start. It’s truly not rocket science. |
Eh, my monthly mortgage is about that on my SFH that I bought low and refinanced low ... but taxes and property insurance are another $2k. Insurance is getting really expensive. |
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1. You don’t need a million dollar home.
2. You don’t need to make 50% of your home value unless you have very unusual expenses. 3. Many families have two incomes. Even if one partner earns less than the other, it makes it a lot easier. |
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1st time homebuyers often can get an FHA loan, which is similar to a VA loan. Look into it.
There are lots of (older) reasonably well-maintained detached houses in Fairfax County for well under $1M. Redfin is your friend. |
NP I live in DC, my mortgage is a 15 year one that we pay 2400 a month. We live in an attached town home with 3 bedrooms. Our friends just bought a bigger 4 bedroom house down the street for 700K. |
| PP again and we bought in 2019. |
We have SFH in West Springfield under $700k. Townhomes can be found at a lower price point, of course. |
Or under $600k. |
| Real question is who wants to settle down in this turd of a city and stay here moving forward? |
It doesn’t have to appreciate to get equity. Equity is just paying your mortgage monthly. Get a roommate. |
| Family money is how MANY in this area do it |
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We bought a condo initially , aggressively saved, paid off over 200K in student loans, and put down payment on house for 920 (this was 2020 so we were also lucky with timing). Dual feds no family help.
If we were to do again would buy a townhome as starter home instead of condo as we barely broke even in condo sale. |
| Dual Feds here and we lived on one income before having kids. We completely saved the other. We saved 50-100k a year. 3-4 years of that and you have your 200k downpayment on the 1m house. |