Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Greater Atlanta metro.
Emphasis on greater, still calling it Atlanta is a stretch.
No one said inside the perimeter and OP has modest expectations for amenities. Lots of lovely suburbs will fit.
Do give a few examples, I have moved to the Greater Atlanta metro area and still looking.
Need :
4 bed, 3 bath
Good Middle and high school
atleast 2,100 sq ft
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago for sure. You can DEFINITELY get a 3 or 4 bedroom in a good school district in either the city or close in suburbs with Metra access for under $500k.
-Lifelong Chicagoan currently living in the suburbs. 5b/2a corner lot, fantastic school district, walkable to metra that has express trains in the morning taking 28 mins to downtown, great community. Paid $335k.
Aren't the property taxes bonkers though? I am from Chicago and went to school in the 'burbs, but have only lived as an adult w/in the city; I have always heard stories about how the lower suburban housing cost is not real due to the high property taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC proper. Zip codes 20019,20020 and 20032. I would say be careful but crime is all over the city.
20019 resident here. It'll get you a nice rowhouse or semi-detached, but even EOTR the days of renovated, sub-$500K SFHs are over.
Still a great place to live as long as you don't have to worry about schools.
NP. How's the crime over that way? We're feeling priced out of NW DC as we're not willing to go into Col Hghts, Petworth, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago for sure. You can DEFINITELY get a 3 or 4 bedroom in a good school district in either the city or close in suburbs with Metra access for under $500k.
-Lifelong Chicagoan currently living in the suburbs. 5b/2a corner lot, fantastic school district, walkable to metra that has express trains in the morning taking 28 mins to downtown, great community. Paid $335k.
Aren't the property taxes bonkers though? I am from Chicago and went to school in the 'burbs, but have only lived as an adult w/in the city; I have always heard stories about how the lower suburban housing cost is not real due to the high property taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Pay very close attention to the property taxes. Sometimes, the cheaper the house, the higher the property taxes, because the area is relatively economically depressed. The city or town has to raise residential property taxes because it doesn’t have enough of a corporate base to tax from. This leads to decreased demand & cheaper houses in that municipality because high property taxes scare off most buyers. Baltimore (City) is a good example of this.
This is not always the case, of course. There are many very wealthy towns in states like TX, IL, NJ, CT, NY and PA that have very high property taxes; high-performing, well-funded schools; and are in close proximity to high paying jobs.
There is a myth that you universally “get what you pay for” just because a municipality has high property taxes. This is not the case. Many municipalities have high property taxes because of pension liabilities to retired local govt workers, for pensions that arguably should never have existed in the first place.
Pay attention to property taxes, school district taxes, wage taxes, car taxes, income taxes and sales taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Greater Atlanta metro.
Emphasis on greater, still calling it Atlanta is a stretch.
No one said inside the perimeter and OP has modest expectations for amenities. Lots of lovely suburbs will fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago for sure. You can DEFINITELY get a 3 or 4 bedroom in a good school district in either the city or close in suburbs with Metra access for under $500k.
-Lifelong Chicagoan currently living in the suburbs. 5b/2a corner lot, fantastic school district, walkable to metra that has express trains in the morning taking 28 mins to downtown, great community. Paid $335k.
Which suburb?!
Anonymous wrote:In Manchester NH for $399K: https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/100-Cameron-St-Manchester-NH-03103/74313739_zpid/
Kitchen actually isn’t terrible.
Anonymous wrote:$345K in Lexington KY:
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/3402-Tisdale-Dr-Lexington-KY-40503/77570711_zpid/
$317K in Wilmington NC:
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/342-Chattooga-Pl-Wilmington-NC-28412/2073619756_zpid/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Clark Summit PA (right outside of Scranton Pa) for $449K: https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/803-Green-Tree-Dr-Clarks-Summit-PA-18411/9532667_zpid/
$450K in Waverly, which is the next town over:
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/107-Upland-Ter-Waverly-PA-18471/2067741002_zpid/
$399K in an exburb of NYC:
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/97-Ehrhardt-Rd-Pearl-River-NY-10965/32389777_zpid/
$449K in Manilus NY, near Syracuse:
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/169-Edwards-Falls-Ln-Manlius-NY-13104/119164510_zpid/
My sister lives in Manlius! Too cold and snowy for me, but it's a lovely area. I think it is pretty popular among SU professors. Schools are fabulous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago for sure. You can DEFINITELY get a 3 or 4 bedroom in a good school district in either the city or close in suburbs with Metra access for under $500k.
-Lifelong Chicagoan currently living in the suburbs. 5b/2a corner lot, fantastic school district, walkable to metra that has express trains in the morning taking 28 mins to downtown, great community. Paid $335k.
Which suburb?!
Anonymous wrote:Chicago for sure. You can DEFINITELY get a 3 or 4 bedroom in a good school district in either the city or close in suburbs with Metra access for under $500k.
-Lifelong Chicagoan currently living in the suburbs. 5b/2a corner lot, fantastic school district, walkable to metra that has express trains in the morning taking 28 mins to downtown, great community. Paid $335k.