Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Too long. Should’ve just bought a 2BR condo when I had 3% for FHA loan and got a roommate when I was single.
Bought with my wife once we had cobbled together 12% down payment. We were stressed about not having 20%, but in hindsight it would have been SO DUMB to wait. We would have been priced out. We have friends who insisted on 20% and have never been able to catch up to annual price increases. And now with 7% rates, they are priced out.
Best advice I can give any people under the age of 35 is to not wait to hit 20% down payment. That’s advice from another bygone era when housing was much cheaper. Buy with 5% and get a roommate to offset the mortgage if you’re single. Time in the market will always benefit you.
You can say that if it would have worked out for you in hindsight but the starter condo path is risky. I know as many people who were burned/delayed in ultimately buying a house by their starter condo purchase as who benefited from it.
True — people who bought a DC condo in 2013 and sold in 2018 for $200k gains don’t understand how lucky they were with timing on DC condos. Plenty of 2019 - 2022 condo buyers selling in 2024 for zero gain or sometimes a loss, plus transaction costs.
City condos aren’t the property ladder they once were.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Too long. Should’ve just bought a 2BR condo when I had 3% for FHA loan and got a roommate when I was single.
Bought with my wife once we had cobbled together 12% down payment. We were stressed about not having 20%, but in hindsight it would have been SO DUMB to wait. We would have been priced out. We have friends who insisted on 20% and have never been able to catch up to annual price increases. And now with 7% rates, they are priced out.
Best advice I can give any people under the age of 35 is to not wait to hit 20% down payment. That’s advice from another bygone era when housing was much cheaper. Buy with 5% and get a roommate to offset the mortgage if you’re single. Time in the market will always benefit you.
You can say that if it would have worked out for you in hindsight but the starter condo path is risky. I know as many people who were burned/delayed in ultimately buying a house by their starter condo purchase as who benefited from it.
Anonymous wrote:Too long. Should’ve just bought a 2BR condo when I had 3% for FHA loan and got a roommate when I was single.
Bought with my wife once we had cobbled together 12% down payment. We were stressed about not having 20%, but in hindsight it would have been SO DUMB to wait. We would have been priced out. We have friends who insisted on 20% and have never been able to catch up to annual price increases. And now with 7% rates, they are priced out.
Best advice I can give any people under the age of 35 is to not wait to hit 20% down payment. That’s advice from another bygone era when housing was much cheaper. Buy with 5% and get a roommate to offset the mortgage if you’re single. Time in the market will always benefit you.