Anonymous wrote:Would she rather rent for a bit and take her time to buy or face moving again in five years, possibly with another kid, when schools are on the line? Unless you're willing to choose a close-in suburb with good public schools, which for $900,000 you could certainly do.
Having jobs in close-in MD and close-in VA means you have some tricky commute considerations. It may make sense to live close to one of your jobs and have one do all pick-up and drop-off while the other bites the bullet on commuting...are either of your jobs likely to change in the next few years?
Buying a house is a hard decision to make, and we learned a ton renting our first couple years here and then learned a ton more our first year with a baby as to what really mattered for us in terms of location, house, etc.
On a side note. I think that people here put too much importance on what the school does and not enough on the parents. Every meaningful study of schools shows that as incomes of the students rise, so does performance, no matter what else is done. Most of the neighborhoods are rapidly gentrifying. I just think it's funny that people don't think that as the demographics change, the schools want. From what I've read about some schools in east MoCo, a good school can certainly turn into a mediocre one in that period of time.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We already have a realtor and a lender. We've been lurking for a while and did a recon visit back in April,,but haven't been able to commit until now.
I definitely don't need something West of the Park, it's better for our commutes to be East. We also have will child care already worked out through work.
When I said I didn't know what would happen in 5 years, I meant with the school system, not my situation. I'm a big believer in the idea that schools are not good or bad, and the big determinant of a schools quality is the income of the parents. I think if you bussed the entire student population from Bethesda into a poor performing school in SE and vice versa, the performance of the students would likely not change. In fact I suspect that given an influx of motivated students with wealthy families to the school in SE would probably do better.
It's fairly obvious that the demographics of the District are changing at a rapid clip and in 5 years the distribution of wealth in the area will look very different. The schools will likely improve and the calculus will change. So buying now planning on what schools will be like in 5 years seems silly to me.
And I'm a little sad to be leaving my college town, but the opportunity for me is very promising. That's the thing about the city. More opportunities.
I actually liked Brookland, especially the yards. Takoma is nice as well. Brightwood, not as much. The only thing I worry about Brookland is that it is very hot and the potential to overpay is high. I've actually done a fair bit of research and there are probably 5-6 neighborhoods that are acceptable to us where we probably would be very happy, especially given my school philosophy..
Thanks for the advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With a 900K budget, you should definitely be able to find a nice house or rowhouse east of rock creek park. It may take a few months of looking though so you should prepare for at least a short term rental. Since schools are not an issue for this move, that opens your field considerably. West of the park will be extremely tricky for that budget - very little inventory to begin with in all price ranges, and almost non-existent in the 900k and below range (some do get listed for below that but then often get bid up for way more). With 2 big dogs, I'd try to find a house with a bit of yard if I were you. It's possible in Takoma, Brightwood or Brookland (brookland's got a lot of boosters tho I find that neighborhood really meh myself). Lots of other areas if you're ok with rowhouse. Get an agent and pre-approval letter ASAP.
OP is coming from an midwest college town. his wife doesn't really want to move to DC.
do you *really* think they (more likely she) will like living east of the park???? it's a lot nicer than it used to be, but we are talking quantum shift here.
Anonymous wrote:With a 900K budget, you should definitely be able to find a nice house or rowhouse east of rock creek park. It may take a few months of looking though so you should prepare for at least a short term rental. Since schools are not an issue for this move, that opens your field considerably. West of the park will be extremely tricky for that budget - very little inventory to begin with in all price ranges, and almost non-existent in the 900k and below range (some do get listed for below that but then often get bid up for way more). With 2 big dogs, I'd try to find a house with a bit of yard if I were you. It's possible in Takoma, Brightwood or Brookland (brookland's got a lot of boosters tho I find that neighborhood really meh myself). Lots of other areas if you're ok with rowhouse. Get an agent and pre-approval letter ASAP.