Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another to consider is capital gains tax. You will not have to pay this on up to $500K (if married) if you sell your primary residence before moving into another one, but if you will if you sell it as a rental down the road.
There may be some exemptions you can apply here, not sure.
As long as you have lived in the house for 2 out of the last 5 years, you won't have to pay capital gains on the home sale.
Anonymous wrote:Another to consider is capital gains tax. You will not have to pay this on up to $500K (if married) if you sell your primary residence before moving into another one, but if you will if you sell it as a rental down the road.
There may be some exemptions you can apply here, not sure.
Anonymous wrote:Will you be approved for a mortgage for the new house if you keep it as a rental? Find out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We want to get a slightly bigger house and to live in a better neighborhood with better schools. So - do we sell our place or rent it out?
Mortgage remaining: $160k
Home value (conservative): $350k
Monthly PITI: $1k
Likely rent: $1800-$2000
HHI: $160K
We have about $50k saved (in actual $, not equity) towards a down payment on a new home.
WWYD? Take the monthly rental income, and take the long term approach of the house as a long term investment? Or take the money and run - putting a bigger down payment on a new house?
Just curious what people's thoughts are.
Don't know about the DC tenant laws but we rent our former home in VA and it was the greatest thing we ever did. The rent is similar to yours ($2000/month) monthly payment similar to yours ($1000) and we take the funds and prepay early our principal on the mortgage. We've had only 2 tenants in the last 5 years and the current ones just signed an 18 month lease (extending the 2 years they have already been there). It would be great if we continue on path and are able to have it paid off within 5 years which would be 12 years early.
I am in the same situation as the OP, but I am in VA. We did the calculation and decided not to rent it out. Here's reason. Let's say the house is worth $350K and rental income is $2,000 per month, after expense (property taxes, insurance, HOA, repair, etc), you get about $18,000 per year (you may not get this much if required more repair throughout the year), then the return of investment is about 5%. Yes, I know the house can appreciate over time and tax deduction of the depreciation value of the house. Yes, the house can lose value as well (as in 2008 housing bubble) and yes, you will pay tax when you sale your house in the future because of the depreciation of the tax you take over the years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We want to get a slightly bigger house and to live in a better neighborhood with better schools. So - do we sell our place or rent it out?
Mortgage remaining: $160k
Home value (conservative): $350k
Monthly PITI: $1k
Likely rent: $1800-$2000
HHI: $160K
We have about $50k saved (in actual $, not equity) towards a down payment on a new home.
WWYD? Take the monthly rental income, and take the long term approach of the house as a long term investment? Or take the money and run - putting a bigger down payment on a new house?
Just curious what people's thoughts are.
Don't know about the DC tenant laws but we rent our former home in VA and it was the greatest thing we ever did. The rent is similar to yours ($2000/month) monthly payment similar to yours ($1000) and we take the funds and prepay early our principal on the mortgage. We've had only 2 tenants in the last 5 years and the current ones just signed an 18 month lease (extending the 2 years they have already been there). It would be great if we continue on path and are able to have it paid off within 5 years which would be 12 years early.
Anonymous wrote:We want to get a slightly bigger house and to live in a better neighborhood with better schools. So - do we sell our place or rent it out?
Mortgage remaining: $160k
Home value (conservative): $350k
Monthly PITI: $1k
Likely rent: $1800-$2000
HHI: $160K
We have about $50k saved (in actual $, not equity) towards a down payment on a new home.
WWYD? Take the monthly rental income, and take the long term approach of the house as a long term investment? Or take the money and run - putting a bigger down payment on a new house?
Just curious what people's thoughts are.