Anonymous wrote:If you buy for less than 6 years it's almost always better to rent and invest your money in a diversified portfolio.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One friend bought a condo for their eldest thinking he’ll there for med school as well and other siblings will go there as well. He went to a med school in another town and one sibling didn’t get accepted while other went to an Ivy. They rented it out for a year then sold it at without much appreciation. Their realtor’s commission ate up their appreciation.
If the town was anything like the college town where my kids live, they at least avoided dealing with scummy slum-lord type landlords. Also, if they at least "broke even" on the sale between appreciation and the realtor's fees--that's better than completely throwing away rent money each month.
Anonymous wrote:One friend bought a condo for their eldest thinking he’ll there for med school as well and other siblings will go there as well. He went to a med school in another town and one sibling didn’t get accepted while other went to an Ivy. They rented it out for a year then sold it at without much appreciation. Their realtor’s commission ate up their appreciation.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone else bought an investment property in your child’s college hometown? We use ours instead of staying at a hotel for football games as well as an AirBnB at other times. Hotels jack up the rates so much for move in and move out as well as football and other weekends, it just made sense. We may turn into a college rental (there are prop management companies) after he graduates.
We caught the market just before it has gone crazy.