Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Hope this will clarify. As a self-employed person, my cash flow works differently than an employee. I get quarterly distributions, which are used to in its entirety to pay federal taxes, and I also lay a lot of state taxes due to individual and partnership circumstances. It’s apples to oranges to some extent, but the $18-20K is my gross monthly distribution before retirement contributions, 529, healthcare premiums), etc. Keep in mind there’s no match. That is why I used that number. Hopefully that helps.
In any event, a $10K mortgage on $20K still seems untenable?
So you don’t make $650k..
There is no way you are paying 60% + in effective taxes, even in a multi state partnership.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Hope this will clarify. As a self-employed person, my cash flow works differently than an employee. I get quarterly distributions, which are used to in its entirety to pay federal taxes, and I also lay a lot of state taxes due to individual and partnership circumstances. It’s apples to oranges to some extent, but the $18-20K is my gross monthly distribution before retirement contributions, 529, healthcare premiums), etc. Keep in mind there’s no match. That is why I used that number. Hopefully that helps.
In any event, a $10K mortgage on $20K still seems untenable?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the following and would love insight. I’m a divorced mom of two “stuck” in a house in a school district where I’ve had less than good experiences. I’ve been looking at Kensington (closer to Connecticut), CC, Bethesda for years. From everything I read on here, it seems like my annual income is in alignment with much of the socio-economic demographic who lives in those areas. However, there is no way I could buy a $1.5M house and stay within an affordable monthly mortgage since even an $800K house would be well above $5K/month. Besides people’s parents giving them a down payment, how are others making this work? I pay for everything for the kids so please be kind as I am also trying to reduce my commute now that I have to come to the office more.
Current annual comp: $650K
Monthly gross income: $18-20K
28/36 rule: $5Kish / month mortgage
Current home value: $590K
Remaining mortgage: $470K
Current monthly mortgage: $2800
How is your “gross” monthly comp 20k if you make 650k a year? Even net should be like 30k/month. If so, you can afford more than you think. The 28/36 rule is also about gross, not net comp.
In a word, taxes. I’m a partner (lawyer) so I write very big checks to the government quarterly. $20K is the absolute max I can make if I am not maxing out 401(k), which I’d prefer to do as compared to putting that towards a mortgage.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the following and would love insight. I’m a divorced mom of two “stuck” in a house in a school district where I’ve had less than good experiences. I’ve been looking at Kensington (closer to Connecticut), CC, Bethesda for years. From everything I read on here, it seems like my annual income is in alignment with much of the socio-economic demographic who lives in those areas. However, there is no way I could buy a $1.5M house and stay within an affordable monthly mortgage since even an $800K house would be well above $5K/month. Besides people’s parents giving them a down payment, how are others making this work? I pay for everything for the kids so please be kind as I am also trying to reduce my commute now that I have to come to the office more.
Current annual comp: $650K
Monthly gross income: $18-20K
28/36 rule: $5Kish / month mortgage
Current home value: $590K
Remaining mortgage: $470K
Current monthly mortgage: $2800
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the following and would love insight. I’m a divorced mom of two “stuck” in a house in a school district where I’ve had less than good experiences. I’ve been looking at Kensington (closer to Connecticut), CC, Bethesda for years. From everything I read on here, it seems like my annual income is in alignment with much of the socio-economic demographic who lives in those areas. However, there is no way I could buy a $1.5M house and stay within an affordable monthly mortgage since even an $800K house would be well above $5K/month. Besides people’s parents giving them a down payment, how are others making this work? I pay for everything for the kids so please be kind as I am also trying to reduce my commute now that I have to come to the office more.
Current annual comp: $650K
Monthly gross income: $18-20K
28/36 rule: $5Kish / month mortgage
Current home value: $590K
Remaining mortgage: $470K
Current monthly mortgage: $2800
How is your “gross” monthly comp 20k if you make 650k a year? Even net should be like 30k/month. If so, you can afford more than you think. The 28/36 rule is also about gross, not net comp.
In a word, taxes. I’m a partner (lawyer) so I write very big checks to the government quarterly. $20K is the absolute max I can make if I am not maxing out 401(k), which I’d prefer to do as compared to putting that towards a mortgage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the following and would love insight. I’m a divorced mom of two “stuck” in a house in a school district where I’ve had less than good experiences. I’ve been looking at Kensington (closer to Connecticut), CC, Bethesda for years. From everything I read on here, it seems like my annual income is in alignment with much of the socio-economic demographic who lives in those areas. However, there is no way I could buy a $1.5M house and stay within an affordable monthly mortgage since even an $800K house would be well above $5K/month. Besides people’s parents giving them a down payment, how are others making this work? I pay for everything for the kids so please be kind as I am also trying to reduce my commute now that I have to come to the office more.
Current annual comp: $650K
Monthly gross income: $18-20K
28/36 rule: $5Kish / month mortgage
Current home value: $590K
Remaining mortgage: $470K
Current monthly mortgage: $2800
How is your “gross” monthly comp 20k if you make 650k a year? Even net should be like 30k/month. If so, you can afford more than you think. The 28/36 rule is also about gross, not net comp.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the following and would love insight. I’m a divorced mom of two “stuck” in a house in a school district where I’ve had less than good experiences. I’ve been looking at Kensington (closer to Connecticut), CC, Bethesda for years. From everything I read on here, it seems like my annual income is in alignment with much of the socio-economic demographic who lives in those areas. However, there is no way I could buy a $1.5M house and stay within an affordable monthly mortgage since even an $800K house would be well above $5K/month. Besides people’s parents giving them a down payment, how are others making this work? I pay for everything for the kids so please be kind as I am also trying to reduce my commute now that I have to come to the office more.
Current annual comp: $650K
Monthly gross income: $18-20K
28/36 rule: $5Kish / month mortgage
Current home value: $590K
Remaining mortgage: $470K
Current monthly mortgage: $2800