Anonymous wrote:Bought a condo in 2007 and have major remorse. The price has since dropped some, but not a ton, maybe 20-30K and we have put in maybe 10-15K in upgrades. So yes we have lost money. However money loss aside I'd still say that looking back I think buying a condo is the dumbest thing anyone can do. We planned on being there 5 years and we were but when we bought it we didn't look at how financially stupid it is to buy a place you know you won't be in longer than 5 years. You outgrow the space faster than planned, get hit with special assessments, have to deal with the HOA to do anything and so forth. Even if you can sell it for more you still have to pay a realtor fee and in the end walk away with no profit. Yes I would never recommend anyone buy a condo and regret that we didn't think it though the first time around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bought a condo in 2007 and have major remorse. The price has since dropped some, but not a ton, maybe 20-30K and we have put in maybe 10-15K in upgrades. So yes we have lost money. However money loss aside I'd still say that looking back I think buying a condo is the dumbest thing anyone can do. We planned on being there 5 years and we were but when we bought it we didn't look at how financially stupid it is to buy a place you know you won't be in longer than 5 years. You outgrow the space faster than planned, get hit with special assessments, have to deal with the HOA to do anything and so forth. Even if you can sell it for more you still have to pay a realtor fee and in the end walk away with no profit. Yes I would never recommend anyone buy a condo and regret that we didn't think it though the first time around.
Not necessarily true. I bought a condo in '93, sold it in '06 and walked away with $165K. Not bad for a condo! But then again, I did have it for 13 years![]()
Anonymous wrote:Bought a condo in 2007 and have major remorse. The price has since dropped some, but not a ton, maybe 20-30K and we have put in maybe 10-15K in upgrades. So yes we have lost money. However money loss aside I'd still say that looking back I think buying a condo is the dumbest thing anyone can do. We planned on being there 5 years and we were but when we bought it we didn't look at how financially stupid it is to buy a place you know you won't be in longer than 5 years. You outgrow the space faster than planned, get hit with special assessments, have to deal with the HOA to do anything and so forth. Even if you can sell it for more you still have to pay a realtor fee and in the end walk away with no profit. Yes I would never recommend anyone buy a condo and regret that we didn't think it though the first time around.
Anonymous wrote:Bought a condo in 2007 and have major remorse. The price has since dropped some, but not a ton, maybe 20-30K and we have put in maybe 10-15K in upgrades. So yes we have lost money. However money loss aside I'd still say that looking back I think buying a condo is the dumbest thing anyone can do. We planned on being there 5 years and we were but when we bought it we didn't look at how financially stupid it is to buy a place you know you won't be in longer than 5 years. You outgrow the space faster than planned, get hit with special assessments, have to deal with the HOA to do anything and so forth. Even if you can sell it for more you still have to pay a realtor fee and in the end walk away with no profit. Yes I would never recommend anyone buy a condo and regret that we didn't think it though the first time around.
Anonymous wrote:I don't have buyer's remorse, though I occasionally wonder if I should have bought a house with fewer deferred maintenance issues. We're looking at a LOT of money in necessary upgrades in the next few years, and part of me wishes I could have bought a house with that stuff already done.
That said, we love our house, the neighborhood and the schools and we got a very good price on it. So I pretty much just suck it up.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. Curious about what buyers remorse OP is talking about?
Anonymous wrote:We bought a house a few months ago and only recently started engaging in 'what if' discussions. We worry we overpaid or that we could have gotten more house if we chose a different area, etc. Most of the second guessing was forgetting how much housing is in this area. We really did get the house we liked the most at our preferred price point.
Anonymous wrote:what would you attribute to it?