Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:10-15k in savings is kind of tight for a new homeowner. I would go with 10%, but then once your savings build back up, aggressively pre-pay to get to 20% and appeal to get rid of PMI.
PMI would only be about $50 a month, so that actually isn't my concern (but should I be concerned you think?), concern is that I really won't be eating away at principle for a long long time, will be the case wth 20% down (given today's rates) right, but even much more the case with 10% down? Conceptually and realistically, does this matter for anything? This is my question.
The length of your loan is what determines the rate you are eating into principal. Not putting the extra 10% means you will be a) taking out a 10% larger principal overall, b) paying some amount into PMI.
But IMO it's worse if you have some emergency and have to tap into a credit line that has even higher interest rates. 10-15k just isn't very much liquid savings to handle much of anything and being a new homeowner often comes with a lot of unexpected costs.
So your choices are a) Wait to buy a house, b) Buy a house with 20% down and take your chances that no big costs come up or c) Buy a house with 10%, invest your savings in an account yielding 5%. If you don't want to wait to buy a house (and it's not likely interest rates are coming down any time soon), then I would go with c. There's a chance there will be another interest rate hike, but there's also a chance there won't. Prices don't seem to be appreciating too quickly (and in some places they are going down), so you could just keep saving and wait to buy a house.