Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bought in 2005 with the expectation of flipping the home and moving out of DC in 2 years. Couldn’t sell until 2015 and we didn’t even break even. Bought for 360. Put 35k into the home and sold for 365k.
I will never buy at the height of a market again.
Good luck with that since you don't know it's the height of the market, until it's not. The market can turn at any time, no one knows.
Anonymous wrote:That’s so surprising to me. We bought a row house in DC for 420k in late 2006. We have done some work on it—probably 150k in upgrades—and it’s worth 900 to one million now. Of course, we haven’t actually tried to sell it! I thought most of the DC area was similar.
Anonymous wrote:Bought in 2005 with the expectation of flipping the home and moving out of DC in 2 years. Couldn’t sell until 2015 and we didn’t even break even. Bought for 360. Put 35k into the home and sold for 365k.
I will never buy at the height of a market again.
Anonymous wrote:That’s so surprising to me. We bought a row house in DC for 420k in late 2006. We have done some work on it—probably 150k in upgrades—and it’s worth 900 to one million now. Of course, we haven’t actually tried to sell it! I thought most of the DC area was similar.
Anonymous wrote:Bought a 1br condo in 2005
Saw the market dip, bought a 4 br house and rented out the condo waiting for prices to go up to sell it
In 2012 saw the market go down and bought a new construction and rented out the 4 br house waiting for prices to go up to sell
2016 sold the 4br house for basically break even, sold the condo for 25% less than we paid.
I check the condo building and prices are still lat, the 4br house has appreciated about 20%
These are homes in Tysons inside the beltway with good schools