Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks for your input. We are in Arlington, so the houses aren’t big, just absurdly expensive. The only reason we’re considering staying is because our child has special needs and is doing really well in her school. It feels worth extra money/a smaller house to not uproot her.
The fact that it’s a smaller house seems relevant to me because we’re still paying taxes on a $900k house but the repairs are on a 3 BR, 1800 sq foot house, not on a mansion at that price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:do u do your own grass cutting, shrub cutting, mulching, house cleaning, some DIY, etc? Do you drive older cars that are paid off? Do you refrain from buying new clothes all the time? Do you clip coupons and buy things on sale? Then it might work.Anonymous wrote:We have $250k to put down. Looking at the numbers, it looks like we could afford a $900k home with that large of a downpayment. Even though yearly income is just $180. One elementary age child. No debts. We do need aftercare and summer camps. We don’t take expensive vacations. Does this sound right? Or does it sound like one of those things that works out on paper but will never work in real life?
We live in an affordable million-dolllar+ house and we have always mowed the lawn, cut the shrubs, planted flowers, cleaned the windows, cleaned the house without a service and do basic repairs and painting because we were raised doing and we don't mind. You can afford a lot more house if you are willing to take care of it yourself. Everything is a trade off.
Exactly this. It would depend on your lifestyle. If you are thrifty, and generally good with money, you can make it without a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:do u do your own grass cutting, shrub cutting, mulching, house cleaning, some DIY, etc? Do you drive older cars that are paid off? Do you refrain from buying new clothes all the time? Do you clip coupons and buy things on sale? Then it might work.Anonymous wrote:We have $250k to put down. Looking at the numbers, it looks like we could afford a $900k home with that large of a downpayment. Even though yearly income is just $180. One elementary age child. No debts. We do need aftercare and summer camps. We don’t take expensive vacations. Does this sound right? Or does it sound like one of those things that works out on paper but will never work in real life?
We live in an affordable million-dolllar+ house and we have always mowed the lawn, cut the shrubs, planted flowers, cleaned the windows, cleaned the house without a service and do basic repairs and painting because we were raised doing and we don't mind. You can afford a lot more house if you are willing to take care of it yourself. Everything is a trade off.
Exactly this. It would depend on your lifestyle. If you are thrifty, and generally good with money, you can make it without a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:do u do your own grass cutting, shrub cutting, mulching, house cleaning, some DIY, etc? Do you drive older cars that are paid off? Do you refrain from buying new clothes all the time? Do you clip coupons and buy things on sale? Then it might work.Anonymous wrote:We have $250k to put down. Looking at the numbers, it looks like we could afford a $900k home with that large of a downpayment. Even though yearly income is just $180. One elementary age child. No debts. We do need aftercare and summer camps. We don’t take expensive vacations. Does this sound right? Or does it sound like one of those things that works out on paper but will never work in real life?
We live in an affordable million-dolllar+ house and we have always mowed the lawn, cut the shrubs, planted flowers, cleaned the windows, cleaned the house without a service and do basic repairs and painting because we were raised doing and we don't mind. You can afford a lot more house if you are willing to take care of it yourself. Everything is a trade off.
Anonymous wrote:do u do your own grass cutting, shrub cutting, mulching, house cleaning, some DIY, etc? Do you drive older cars that are paid off? Do you refrain from buying new clothes all the time? Do you clip coupons and buy things on sale? Then it might work.Anonymous wrote:We have $250k to put down. Looking at the numbers, it looks like we could afford a $900k home with that large of a downpayment. Even though yearly income is just $180. One elementary age child. No debts. We do need aftercare and summer camps. We don’t take expensive vacations. Does this sound right? Or does it sound like one of those things that works out on paper but will never work in real life?
Anonymous wrote:My spouse and I make 200k. Our monthly mortgage (including taxes and insurance) is a paltry $1400. Even with this low note, the money goes fast. Part of this is self-imposed due to maxing out IRAs, the rest is life- kids, groceries (getting more expensive every week), utilities, cars, car maintenance, house maintenance, kids college savings…etc.
If you’re disciplined enough to have saved 250k on a salary of 180k, I would say you might have a chance at making this happen. If you were gifted the money (nothing wrong with this), then you need to look at the numbers even more carefully. I say this not to be mean, but those who accumulate money in their own usually have a better handle on money.
Anonymous wrote:OP, your lifestyle sounds similar to ours, but we did $500K down on our $925K house- so our monthly payment is a lot lower than your would be. I think it sounds doable, but VERY tight. I’m not sure anyone will underwrite you for that.
+1Anonymous wrote:OP, your lifestyle sounds similar to ours, but we did $500K down on our $925K house- so our monthly payment is a lot lower than your would be. I think it sounds doable, but VERY tight. I’m not sure anyone will underwrite you for that.