Anonymous wrote:Loudon will get you more house for your money and other things like daycare and services (landscaping, for example) are less expensive, too. But tere are trade offs. You're living farther out and it feels like suburbia. Not Arlington-style suburbia, but real suburbia. You will drive everywhere and there will not be the diversity or variation you can enjoy closer in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudon will get you more house for your money and other things like daycare and services (landscaping, for example) are less expensive, too. But tere are trade offs. You're living farther out and it feels like suburbia. Not Arlington-style suburbia, but real suburbia. You will drive everywhere and there will not be the diversity or variation you can enjoy closer in.
You're wrong on the diversity. Lots of it out here.
Anonymous wrote:Loudon will get you more house for your money and other things like daycare and services (landscaping, for example) are less expensive, too. But tere are trade offs. You're living farther out and it feels like suburbia. Not Arlington-style suburbia, but real suburbia. You will drive everywhere and there will not be the diversity or variation you can enjoy closer in.
Anonymous wrote:The housing stock is nice in loudon with planned neighborhoods vs the eyesores closer in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never lived IN DC so I have no idea if it's cheaper but it's not cheap. We pay $2300 a month in rent for a nice townhouse near good schools. Property taxes are high- we don't own here so we don't pay taxes on a home, but for our two vehicles we pay about $850/year in property taxes for our car decals. Gas is right now about $3.35/gallon out here (or was last time I filled up a couple days ago).
If you still have to work in DC, I honestly imagine most of your expenses would stay about the same out here and anything you saved would probably be eaten by your commute. It's probably not in reality much cheaper, it's just that you might get a little more for your money... e.g., a 4 bedroom townhouse for $2300/month vs. a 1 bedroom apartment for the same.
You think that's not cheap? Seriously? That's peanuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can buy a real house in loudoun for the price of teardown closer in.
And you can think of it fondly while you're commuting, because unless you also work in Loudoun, you'll spend very little time in it.
That's exactly what I think about the far out MD suburbs!
Anonymous wrote:I've never lived IN DC so I have no idea if it's cheaper but it's not cheap. We pay $2300 a month in rent for a nice townhouse near good schools. Property taxes are high- we don't own here so we don't pay taxes on a home, but for our two vehicles we pay about $850/year in property taxes for our car decals. Gas is right now about $3.35/gallon out here (or was last time I filled up a couple days ago).
If you still have to work in DC, I honestly imagine most of your expenses would stay about the same out here and anything you saved would probably be eaten by your commute. It's probably not in reality much cheaper, it's just that you might get a little more for your money... e.g., a 4 bedroom townhouse for $2300/month vs. a 1 bedroom apartment for the same.
Anonymous wrote:I also think it depends on where you are buying. Housing compared from McLean to Sterling is going to be cheaper. But I wouldn't call places like Ashburn, Brambleton, Lansdowne, etc "affordable".
What makes Loudoun wealthier than Fairfax is Loudoun doesn't have the same wealth disparity as Fairfax does of ultra rich and ultra poor. There are several areas in Fairfax county that one probably wouldn't consider living in. Other than maybe 1 or 2 pockets (like Sterling Park), there aren't those kinds of areas in Loudoun.
Anonymous wrote:I've never lived IN DC so I have no idea if it's cheaper but it's not cheap. We pay $2300 a month in rent for a nice townhouse near good schools. Property taxes are high- we don't own here so we don't pay taxes on a home, but for our two vehicles we pay about $850/year in property taxes for our car decals. Gas is right now about $3.35/gallon out here (or was last time I filled up a couple days ago).
If you still have to work in DC, I honestly imagine most of your expenses would stay about the same out here and anything you saved would probably be eaten by your commute. It's probably not in reality much cheaper, it's just that you might get a little more for your money... e.g., a 4 bedroom townhouse for $2300/month vs. a 1 bedroom apartment for the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can buy a real house in loudoun for the price of teardown closer in.
And you can think of it fondly while you're commuting, because unless you also work in Loudoun, you'll spend very little time in it.