Anonymous wrote:Yes. We’re at ~21% of gross
PITI: $6100 on a 950k mortgage
Total household gross: $350k
Were also maxing 401k’s, IRAs, HSA, putting 5-10k a year each into brokerage, and putting a couple hundred bucks into extra principal payments.
Next up is funding the 529 for future babby, after saving for imminent wedding is done
Anonymous wrote:Nope. We’re currently at a HHI of $16K/mo and our house expenses are over $5K/mo. Things are definitely tight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Our mortgage and taxes are just under 10% of our HHI. We put down 50%, but even if we’d put down the standard 20%, it would be 12% of our monthly gross. It was a higher percentage when we bought 6 six years ago but we were in our twenties and our income has grown. We were lucky to refinance to a 3% mortgage rate during the pandemic. We also have not bought a bigger house since our income increased - a big reason being the increased rates.
Having a lower % of our income going to housing gives us financial flexibility. House is 3k sq ft - not huge not tiny. Bought an average size house for precisely this reason- so we would not entirely outgrow it and could comfortably stay it the market changed in 10 years, which it did. In hindsight probably would’ve bought a completed forever house but definitely would have been a stretch at the time
LOL at 3000 sq ft being an average size house. Never change, DCUM!
Anonymous wrote:Yes. Our mortgage and taxes are just under 10% of our HHI. We put down 50%, but even if we’d put down the standard 20%, it would be 12% of our monthly gross. It was a higher percentage when we bought 6 six years ago but we were in our twenties and our income has grown. We were lucky to refinance to a 3% mortgage rate during the pandemic. We also have not bought a bigger house since our income increased - a big reason being the increased rates.
Having a lower % of our income going to housing gives us financial flexibility. House is 3k sq ft - not huge not tiny. Bought an average size house for precisely this reason- so we would not entirely outgrow it and could comfortably stay it the market changed in 10 years, which it did. In hindsight probably would’ve bought a completed forever house but definitely would have been a stretch at the time
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can now but remember when it was not the case....
yes
roughly 55k gross monthly income
mortgage 5,600 or 10%
![]()
If you could not I’d be more concerned.
NP. Does the 28% rule actually make sense though? It seems so random and arbitrary. At an HHI of 600K, that's $14k/month. No way I'm spending that much on housing!
The 28% rule of thumb is on net income, not gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can now but remember when it was not the case....
yes
roughly 55k gross monthly income
mortgage 5,600 or 10%
![]()
If you could not I’d be more concerned.
NP. Does the 28% rule actually make sense though? It seems so random and arbitrary. At an HHI of 600K, that's $14k/month. No way I'm spending that much on housing!
The 28% rule of thumb is on net income, not gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can now but remember when it was not the case....
yes
roughly 55k gross monthly income
mortgage 5,600 or 10%
![]()
If you could not I’d be more concerned.
NP. Does the 28% rule actually make sense though? It seems so random and arbitrary. At an HHI of 600K, that's $14k/month. No way I'm spending that much on housing!
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can now but remember when it was not the case....
yes
roughly 55k gross monthly income
mortgage 5,600 or 10%
![]()
If you could not I’d be more concerned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can now but remember when it was not the case....
yes
roughly 55k gross monthly income
mortgage 5,600 or 10%