Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind with respect to houses, there generally is an offsetting price difference in the city due to taxes,i.e. your monthly costs of owning, including mortgage, remain roughly equal due to lower prices per square foot. That has gone away a bit as there are far more updated housing in the city and more people valuing walk ability and a shorter commute than a decade or so ago, but still exists to some extent.
The honest answer is that for all the North Baltimore neighborhoods, including close in county, like Towson and Stoneleigh, there is very high level of demand for well priced properties. Most will sell within a week of listing. If I were op I would connect with a realtor and start touring neighborhoods now. Spring market starts in mid January.
Roughly equal to the county.
Not exactly. I will take a higher mortgage and interest expense (which is fully tax deductible) in a safer area with better schhols and lower crime - than a cheaper house in Baltimore City with worse schools, more crime and very high property taxes. And property taxes are not fully tax deductible as they are subject to the SALT limitations/guidelines.
Regardless - you get what you pay for. Buy in the best public school district and it will be far easier to sell than a house in Balt. City.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind with respect to houses, there generally is an offsetting price difference in the city due to taxes,i.e. your monthly costs of owning, including mortgage, remain roughly equal due to lower prices per square foot. That has gone away a bit as there are far more updated housing in the city and more people valuing walk ability and a shorter commute than a decade or so ago, but still exists to some extent.
The honest answer is that for all the North Baltimore neighborhoods, including close in county, like Towson and Stoneleigh, there is very high level of demand for well priced properties. Most will sell within a week of listing. If I were op I would connect with a realtor and start touring neighborhoods now. Spring market starts in mid January.
Roughly equal to the county.
Not exactly. I will take a higher mortgage and interest expense (which is fully tax deductible) in a safer area with better schhols and lower crime - than a cheaper house in Baltimore City with worse schools, more crime and very high property taxes. And property taxes are not fully tax deductible as they are subject to the SALT limitations/guidelines.
Regardless - you get what you pay for. Buy in the best public school district and it will be far easier to sell than a house in Balt. City.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind with respect to houses, there generally is an offsetting price difference in the city due to taxes,i.e. your monthly costs of owning, including mortgage, remain roughly equal due to lower prices per square foot. That has gone away a bit as there are far more updated housing in the city and more people valuing walk ability and a shorter commute than a decade or so ago, but still exists to some extent.
The honest answer is that for all the North Baltimore neighborhoods, including close in county, like Towson and Stoneleigh, there is very high level of demand for well priced properties. Most will sell within a week of listing. If I were op I would connect with a realtor and start touring neighborhoods now. Spring market starts in mid January.
Roughly equal to the county.
Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind with respect to houses, there generally is an offsetting price difference in the city due to taxes,i.e. your monthly costs of owning, including mortgage, remain roughly equal due to lower prices per square foot. That has gone away a bit as there are far more updated housing in the city and more people valuing walk ability and a shorter commute than a decade or so ago, but still exists to some extent.
The honest answer is that for all the North Baltimore neighborhoods, including close in county, like Towson and Stoneleigh, there is very high level of demand for well priced properties. Most will sell within a week of listing. If I were op I would connect with a realtor and start touring neighborhoods now. Spring market starts in mid January.
Anonymous wrote:OP, the biggest difference in real estate (DC to Baltimore and Baltimore city vs county) is taxes. City taxes are really, really high.
In your shoes (and with time to shop given that you already own a house in DC and some level of commute for some time is possible), I'd target Stoneleigh.
Anonymous wrote:OP, the biggest difference in real estate (DC to Baltimore and Baltimore city vs county) is taxes. City taxes are really, really high.
In your shoes (and with time to shop given that you already own a house in DC and some level of commute for some time is possible), I'd target Stoneleigh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This just went under contract but I know this neighborhood well and it’s a real hidden gem - quiet, safe, and super convenient to everything. https://www.redfin.com/MD/Baltimore/3411-Woodberry-Ave-21211/home/12547012
10 min to Hopkins, downtown, Roland Park schools, etc. 5 min from a grocery.
The public elementary (Medfield Heights) is decent, but for that price you don’t have to sweat one of the many excellent private schools in RP. Although do figure in the eye watering taxes.
There is not a true grocery store within 5 minutes of this house, just a Mom’s organic. Also no yard and in the middle of a townhome community. Great location for empty nesters looking to downside.
Anonymous wrote:Really depends on if you have kids and if you want public/privatr.
Anonymous wrote:Woodbrook doesn't seem like the right neighborhood for this family, but it's a cool house. My vote is for Roland park. They can join the Roland park club for the pool and have their choice of schools.
If the taxes are annoying, Stoneleigh is amazing. Pool, school (public if you want, but lots go to private) lots of hopkins families. Though agree, inventory is a problem now. Reach out to Gans realty if you want an inside scoop on Stoneleigh properties. He bought Kellie langley's business.