Anonymous wrote:Op, buy a big quadruple in EOTR area like anacostia and you could do very well in the future
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, buy a big quadruple in EOTR area like anacostia and you could do very well in the future
This is OP. I’m not interested in an investment property - BTDT. I want to find gracious one level living to enjoy my retirement and eventual grandchildren.
Anonymous wrote:Op, buy a big quadruple in EOTR area like anacostia and you could do very well in the future
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here’s a random 1BR in an older SW building: https://redf.in/yjT9VN
Look at the price history. You can see they tried to rent it out for $2,350/month and were unsuccessful at that (indicating that real rent for a 1BR in that building is likely around $2,100/month).
Yet at the sale price factoring in $1,088/mo HOA dues, buying with 10% down would result in a roughly $3,200/mo payment plus responsibility for inside-your-unit maintenance and repairs.
So why would I buy at $3,200/mo with added responsibility plus the hassle and cost of selling in the future (people statistically don’t stay in condos that long in the DMV), especially in a building where units take awhile to sell, when I can rent the same unit with zero responsibility aside from a 12 month lease at $2,100/mo, and invest the difference?
Judging from the listing photos, the previous poster who mentioned nice gardens and amenities had a point.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s a random 1BR in an older SW building: https://redf.in/yjT9VN
Look at the price history. You can see they tried to rent it out for $2,350/month and were unsuccessful at that (indicating that real rent for a 1BR in that building is likely around $2,100/month).
Yet at the sale price factoring in $1,088/mo HOA dues, buying with 10% down would result in a roughly $3,200/mo payment plus responsibility for inside-your-unit maintenance and repairs.
So why would I buy at $3,200/mo with added responsibility plus the hassle and cost of selling in the future (people statistically don’t stay in condos that long in the DMV), especially in a building where units take awhile to sell, when I can rent the same unit with zero responsibility aside from a 12 month lease at $2,100/mo, and invest the difference?
Anonymous wrote:The HOA fees in some of those buildings are more than the mortgage would be, so that’s priced in.