Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so confused here. How do you make that much income and have such a crappy credit score??
And why on earth are you looking to buy a house in the $700,000 range with so little savings?? Why aren’t you looking at least in the $500,000 range? There are plenty of nice houses for that much.
Where? Any place in that range I’ve found either is a tear down, a school that would require private school, or a crazy high (hoa ) condo.
I would like to keep my entire mortgage, taxes, and etc to under 4000 preferably in the 3300 range.
DP but honestly I think you should buy a condo. The condo market is not going insane like SFHs and you can’t afford down payment/closing costs on a SFH anyway. The HOA fees are annoying but you’re 2 years from being able to buy a SFH. Might as well build some equity.
Buying a condo to live in for just a couple of years is a terrible idea. The closing costs will more than eat up the small amount of equity OP is likely to accrue over that time period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might get a mortgage but you’re not going to get a great rate. 16K isn’t a lot for a down payment. Do you have other savings already? I think that mortgage is way too high...I’d say tighten up your spending discipline before jumping into a mortgage...
Can’t I refi for a better rate a year or so in?
At least 4500 would go toward actually equity and then interest would be tax deductible right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so confused here. How do you make that much income and have such a crappy credit score??
And why on earth are you looking to buy a house in the $700,000 range with so little savings?? Why aren’t you looking at least in the $500,000 range? There are plenty of nice houses for that much.
Where? Any place in that range I’ve found either is a tear down, a school that would require private school, or a crazy high (hoa ) condo.
I would like to keep my entire mortgage, taxes, and etc to under 4000 preferably in the 3300 range.
DP but honestly I think you should buy a condo. The condo market is not going insane like SFHs and you can’t afford down payment/closing costs on a SFH anyway. The HOA fees are annoying but you’re 2 years from being able to buy a SFH. Might as well build some equity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might get a mortgage but you’re not going to get a great rate. 16K isn’t a lot for a down payment. Do you have other savings already? I think that mortgage is way too high...I’d say tighten up your spending discipline before jumping into a mortgage...
Can’t I refi for a better rate a year or so in?
At least 4500 would go toward actually equity and then interest would be tax deductible right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so confused here. How do you make that much income and have such a crappy credit score??
And why on earth are you looking to buy a house in the $700,000 range with so little savings?? Why aren’t you looking at least in the $500,000 range? There are plenty of nice houses for that much.
Where? Any place in that range I’ve found either is a tear down, a school that would require private school, or a crazy high (hoa ) condo.
I would like to keep my entire mortgage, taxes, and etc to under 4000 preferably in the 3300 range.
Anonymous wrote:Also:Anonymous wrote:A move to would like eat 1/2 of my 16k .
A local move should not cost $8,000.
Anonymous wrote:I am so confused here. How do you make that much income and have such a crappy credit score??
And why on earth are you looking to buy a house in the $700,000 range with so little savings?? Why aren’t you looking at least in the $500,000 range? There are plenty of nice houses for that much.
Anonymous wrote:A move to would like eat 1/2 of my 16k .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think you'll be able to borrow $700k with only $16k to put down. That $16k is only a bit over 2% of the amount you want to borrow. Most lenders want you to put down at least a 5% down payment. Zero-down mortgages do exist, but they require good credit.
Also, you really don't want to be cash-strapped and paycheck-to-paycheck after buying a house. Houses break and are expensive to fix.
Is there hope for you? Sure—for the future. You make good money, so you can save. Take a year or two to lower your expenses, save up for a larger down payment, and get your credit in better shape. Then you'll be in a better position to buy.
Even with two moves? Leave 4500k and leave where ever I rent next to my own place?
Anonymous wrote:You might get a mortgage but you’re not going to get a great rate. 16K isn’t a lot for a down payment. Do you have other savings already? I think that mortgage is way too high...I’d say tighten up your spending discipline before jumping into a mortgage...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP will the $16k wipe you out? How will you pay for emergencies, house maintenance, life happens?-
Keep renting (somewhere much cheaper) and build your credit and emergency fund
I will continue to live paycheck to paycheck.
You have a spending issue. You need to get your rent down to $2K-2500 a month, pay off all your debt and save. There is zero excuse to have no savings and debt at that income level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP will the $16k wipe you out? How will you pay for emergencies, house maintenance, life happens?-
Keep renting (somewhere much cheaper) and build your credit and emergency fund
I will continue to live paycheck to paycheck.
You make A LOT but you need more than 16k to buy a house. Sorry. Closing costs alone for a 700k will be AT LEAST that, not even including a down payment.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think you'll be able to borrow $700k with only $16k to put down. That $16k is only a bit over 2% of the amount you want to borrow. Most lenders want you to put down at least a 5% down payment. Zero-down mortgages do exist, but they require good credit.
Also, you really don't want to be cash-strapped and paycheck-to-paycheck after buying a house. Houses break and are expensive to fix.
Is there hope for you? Sure—for the future. You make good money, so you can save. Take a year or two to lower your expenses, save up for a larger down payment, and get your credit in better shape. Then you'll be in a better position to buy.