Anonymous wrote:#3. It's fine.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks, everyone. It's actually helpful to think these through with a bunch of strangers!
I agree with the poster who said that adult children need to have a "home" to come home to. Yes, that's important to me also. If it weren't for climate change, I'd just make our beach house (which is a block from the beach but looks like a traditional house) our home. But we know we need to sell it within the next decade to avoid the mess that our island is going to become.
I'll keep looking for options. Maybe we can find a small townhouse for what our current house would sell for. It's partly those crazy expensive HOA costs that seem to be pricing us out.
Anonymous wrote:pp mentioned, "home" to come home to ... My parent's moved to an area I had no connection with, as soon as I graduated from high school. Yes, it was sad. But I felt it jump-started my adult life. Much more than my college peers, I was planning early for: where will I live this summer and what will I be employed doing to bring in money to pay for my housing. How do I prepare for this. Same with even greater focus on where/how will I support myself after college graduation
Anonymous wrote:Consider how likely you are to continue to want to split time between two residences in the future as you age. Many people would choose instead to select a single location with the atmosphere, amenities, etc. they value most, and just vacation elsewhere from time to time for as long as they feel they both want to and physically can do so easily enough. It's probably a mistake to assume that retirement will be just like your working life except without the job and with just more leisure time; you'll be aging, with all that implies, including the potential to lose interest in relatively frequent moves between homes and the energy and focus required to maintain them both.
You might elect to begin planning for the long-term now, with a view towards access to medical care and aging in place over time. Maybe both your current homes are ideal for that, if you're honest with yourself maybe they're not.
Anonymous wrote:Trouble with condos is maint is charge by SF in most of them having a 3 bedroom is expensive with two bedrooms empty most of time.