Anonymous wrote:Generations of multiple homes in my family and private air travel has finally really made it easy. 54 years old and remember the tough slogs getting to and from back when. Now it’s a 45 minute direct flight from DC to the beach house and about 3 hours to the mountain house. Considering adding a third along the southern Atlantic coast now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No second home for me. I’d rather take that mortgage and time and travel the world!
I'd rather build equity in a second home than leave photos to my children and grandchildren (which they'll just put in boxes in storage) from travel "experiences".
This is how we feel about it too, with our second home, where we will spend the summer because we can't travel anywhere. Traveling holds less appeal to me than it used to because there are fewer and fewer places that aren't overtouristed. I will admit that I don't like people well enough to have to deal with too many of them on my vacation.
I was going to post the same thing. We have our second home and will spend almost all the summer here (and have been here for all the pandemic) except for one summer camp in DC. Our place is on the water and less than 2 hours from DC. And a nicer house than our DC house for less money bc is is a LCOL area. Our combined mortgages are what we would have to pay in total to upgrade our DC house. So now I build equity in two homes.
And we can still travel. But travel doesn’t interest me as much anymore bc as you say, everything is overtouristed and air travel exhausts me. And I don’t like crowds. But I don’t feel like I can’t vacation anywhere bc of my second home. I don’t feel like I have to come here. Pre-pandemic, we came when we wanted to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No second home for me. I’d rather take that mortgage and time and travel the world!
I'd rather build equity in a second home than leave photos to my children and grandchildren (which they'll just put in boxes in storage) from travel "experiences".
This is how we feel about it too, with our second home, where we will spend the summer because we can't travel anywhere. Traveling holds less appeal to me than it used to because there are fewer and fewer places that aren't overtouristed. I will admit that I don't like people well enough to have to deal with too many of them on my vacation.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 50 years old and I know ONE person who has a vacation home. ONE person, in all my 50 years. I can't roll my eyes hard enough at the OP.
Anonymous wrote:With seemingly everyone who has one gone from their main residence right now, anyone else feel this way? Be honest.
Because honestly, this week I can't stop feeling "poor" (not literally, relatively) because we don't have a place to escape to. Relying on whimsical invites to friends' and family vacation homes at this point in our life just feels so low and desperate. I don't care how much or how little financial sense it makes, we need a second home. I'm so over being trapped at home all year, fishing for invitations, or even renting for a week at a time. Perhaps this is the precise feeling that motivates so many to buy a second home?
Anonymous wrote:I own three homes. A 2500 sqft house in NoVa, a 2000 sqft house in Florida, and a 7000 sqft house in the Colorado mountains (inherited). It is killing me and I want to sell them. Don’t do this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With seemingly everyone who has one gone from their main residence right now, anyone else feel this way? Be honest.
Because honestly, this week I can't stop feeling "poor" (not literally, relatively) because we don't have a place to escape to. Relying on whimsical invites to friends' and family vacation homes at this point in our life just feels so low and desperate. I don't care how much or how little financial sense it makes, we need a second home. I'm so over being trapped at home all year, fishing for invitations, or even renting for a week at a time. Perhaps this is the precise feeling that motivates so many to buy a second home?
OP it's not all it's cracked up to be.
A lot of work. Lot's of added expenses.
Anonymous wrote:With seemingly everyone who has one gone from their main residence right now, anyone else feel this way? Be honest.
Because honestly, this week I can't stop feeling "poor" (not literally, relatively) because we don't have a place to escape to. Relying on whimsical invites to friends' and family vacation homes at this point in our life just feels so low and desperate. I don't care how much or how little financial sense it makes, we need a second home. I'm so over being trapped at home all year, fishing for invitations, or even renting for a week at a time. Perhaps this is the precise feeling that motivates so many to buy a second home?