Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What type of maintenance are you talking about?
Acres... we thought the kids would love running around but they are outside for five seconds and then come inside complaining about bugs sigh. There is lawn care, constant rodent mitigation, bug invasions, weeding in all the beds, etc, and the house is too big and so much to keep clean, things breaking. I don't mean to complain, we just didn't realize how much we were taking on.
We didn’t go as far as buying acres, but did move to far reaches of Fairfax County many years ago because we got wrapped up in the idea that we were supposed to buy a big, newer house to raise our kids in. And our experience was similar. Immediate regret. My commute made me cry some days. There were rooms we barely used. It didn’t help that it was mostly older people around us, so no neighbor kids to play with. Plus totally car dependent so they couldn’t even ride bikes beyond a few streets in our small neighborhood.
In our case we had scraped together all the money we could for our first home so we couldn’t take the financial hit. Ended up living there nearly 5 years, but did walk away with some money that we rolled into our next house back inside the beltway. Our house now is much older and less than 2/3 the size of our last house. There are occasional days I wish we had an extra room for flex space, but overall we are sooooo much happier now. We can walk/bike to all sorts of stuff, have tons of kids on our street (small lots = more people around), and a smaller house is less to maintain (mentally and financially).
This is my long way of saying if you know right now it’s not the right fit for your family, and you can take a financial hit, then move. Your setup may be amazing for another family who will hopefully see the value in snapping up a good deal.
Outsourcing things may help in the short term, but if you wait a few years then your kids will be the ages where it’s hard to rip them from their schools, sports teams, etc.