Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I would consider using an agent to find someone to lease for a year. Then rent an apartment with the difference between the mortgage and the rent.
Op here. I don’t want to move all our furnishings in and out is the thing, so I’d like a short term booking that is furnished. I’m also hoping I’ll land a new job in the next few months and I’d like to be back in our home then. So I’m trying to limit it to just a few months, provided I can even find a tenant at the price I want.
You're way too close to the bone here. A layoff shouldn't require that you rent out your house. It might be a good idea to consider permanently downsizing, even if you get a new job quickly. The interest rate is an important factor but if you are living month to month like this, it might be not be enough to make it make sense to keep the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I would consider using an agent to find someone to lease for a year. Then rent an apartment with the difference between the mortgage and the rent.
Op here. I don’t want to move all our furnishings in and out is the thing, so I’d like a short term booking that is furnished. I’m also hoping I’ll land a new job in the next few months and I’d like to be back in our home then. So I’m trying to limit it to just a few months, provided I can even find a tenant at the price I want.
Anonymous wrote:OP — we rent our (luxury, very well located, nicely furnished) apartment in the Boston area this way because we want the flexibility to use it so don’t want a long term lease. We have always been able to find short term renters on Craigslist and FB marketplace. We price slightly below market and get a ton of applicants. I think it helps that there is a really high velocity market of renters in Boston and we are close to Harvard/MIT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP — we rent our (luxury, very well located, nicely furnished) apartment in the Boston area this way because we want the flexibility to use it so don’t want a long term lease. We have always been able to find short term renters on Craigslist and FB marketplace. We price slightly below market and get a ton of applicants. I think it helps that there is a really high velocity market of renters in Boston and we are close to Harvard/MIT.
np - I'd be very interested in this place (we have family near BC) but would never think (and probably wouldn't consider) Craigslist or FB. too bad, sounds great
Anonymous wrote:OP — we rent our (luxury, very well located, nicely furnished) apartment in the Boston area this way because we want the flexibility to use it so don’t want a long term lease. We have always been able to find short term renters on Craigslist and FB marketplace. We price slightly below market and get a ton of applicants. I think it helps that there is a really high velocity market of renters in Boston and we are close to Harvard/MIT.
Anonymous wrote:OP — we rent our (luxury, very well located, nicely furnished) apartment in the Boston area this way because we want the flexibility to use it so don’t want a long term lease. We have always been able to find short term renters on Craigslist and FB marketplace. We price slightly below market and get a ton of applicants. I think it helps that there is a really high velocity market of renters in Boston and we are close to Harvard/MIT.
Anonymous wrote:OP I would consider using an agent to find someone to lease for a year. Then rent an apartment with the difference between the mortgage and the rent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a bunch of people in DC aren't going to be able to help you very much. Especially when we don't know what city you live in.
Op here. Would it help if I posted the listing? Or is that too risky?
We are in Tucson,AZ.
Anonymous wrote:I think a bunch of people in DC aren't going to be able to help you very much. Especially when we don't know what city you live in.