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Metropolitan New York City
Reply to "Potential move to NYC with Kids"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]This is DCUM so people are going to say that you need $300k+ HHI to raise a family in NYC and that you need to send your kids to private. Neither are true. If you really want to live in NYC it’s completely possible to live in a 2BR rental & send your kids to the local public[/quote] Do you live in there on under a 300k HHI? Please share your expenses then. [/quote] Not PP but the median HHI there is only $127k.[/quote] A lot of people here are young and just starting out, bunking with four roommates and taking advantage of free lunches at work. A lot of people (including almost everyone I know) move to the suburbs once they have kids. It’s just so expensive to raise children here, and honestly gets tiring after a while. I’m a big law partner and even at that income a majority of people move to the suburbs. [/quote] I lived there with my parents in the early 2000s and their HHI was 5 figures. It was not difficult to make ends meet and we did not feel poor. I am also in biglaw and not surprised you cannot fully understand the lives of the poorer people who serve you.[/quote] Have you moved back since? Things have changed a lot since the early 2000s. Neighborhoods where you used to be able to find a deal have been gentrified and built up with luxury condos. The mom and pop shops have closed down, with high end stores replacing them. The whole country has gotten more expensive, but NYC has done so on steroids. A lot of people are mentioning to the other boroughs, but you have to keep in mind that once you get far put into the boroughs, it’s not going to really feel like “the city” anymore, so it depends on what you’re looking for. OP seems to want a reasonable commute into the city and to feel like she’s living in NYC, which is why everyone is focusing on the more expensive parts of Manhattan and Brooklyn. [b]Sure, you can live much more cheaply in Kensington or Forest Hills, but you may have to walk to a bus to take to the subway stop to travel an hour into the city on a train that only runs every 30 minutes and it’s going to feel like a suburb[/b]. It’s like, I dunno, moving to Baltimore and saying that you live in DC. [/quote] 1. Both Kensington and Forrest Hills have subway lines running through them. 2. Speaking of the subway, which lines are only running every 30 mins (unless it's on a weekend after midnight and there is some construction going on)? A New Yorker and Kensington resident wants to know.[/quote]
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