Anonymous wrote:Before we retired we sold our single family home in the city and bought 2 condos, one at the beach and one in the city. Makes it very easy to close the door and walk away. HOA takes care of everything, packages, gardens, pool, security, maintenance.
Our life is so streamlined now, we don't really need a car as we can walk everywhere. One of our kids returned after college and we have plenty of room. We may just lend them $ to purchase something, we made plenty of money sending our house and downsizing.
Anonymous wrote:Before we retired we sold our single family home in the city and bought 2 condos, one at the beach and one in the city. Makes it very easy to close the door and walk away. HOA takes care of everything, packages, gardens, pool, security, maintenance.
Our life is so streamlined now, we don't really need a car as we can walk everywhere. One of our kids returned after college and we have plenty of room. We may just lend them $ to purchase something, we made plenty of money sending our house and downsizing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before we retired we sold our single family home in the city and bought 2 condos, one at the beach and one in the city. Makes it very easy to close the door and walk away. HOA takes care of everything, packages, gardens, pool, security, maintenance.
Our life is so streamlined now, we don't really need a car as we can walk everywhere. One of our kids returned after college and we have plenty of room. We may just lend them $ to purchase something, we made plenty of money sending our house and downsizing.
Condos are not a good investment. Waste of money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before we retired we sold our single family home in the city and bought 2 condos, one at the beach and one in the city. Makes it very easy to close the door and walk away. HOA takes care of everything, packages, gardens, pool, security, maintenance.
Our life is so streamlined now, we don't really need a car as we can walk everywhere. One of our kids returned after college and we have plenty of room. We may just lend them $ to purchase something, we made plenty of money sending our house and downsizing.
if you don’t need a car how do you get between your two homes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the thick of the rat race at the moment: high stress / high paying job, expensive house, expensive kids, etc.
One day the kids will hopefully successfully fly from the nest and around that time, I'll be thinking about retirement.
The kid-related expenses would go away, as would, maybe the need for the big house?
I'm looking for tales of downsizing and simplifying the lifestyle in retirement. What has it looked like for you?
I have one kid in college and one in high school so this is becoming a reality. Also the reality is we have such a low interest rate in our home that it does not make sense to move. Also our college kid has expressed multiple times that he wants to find a job in nova and the most economical way for him to start his adult career is living back at home until he gets his feet under him. It’s just so crazy expensive for young people to get ahead that giving them the gift of a free roof over their heads until they are ready to fully handle the sky high housing prices is something we want to do for them.
Personally our house is the perfect size for a family of 4 (2400 sq feet) that if i were in your shoes i’d be downsizing locally with enough space so my kids still have a home as long as needed. But i can’t imagine living in a bigger house than I'm in now. We are in Ashburn and see so many people with these humongous homes it just seems so pointless. Do they like heating and cooling and paying taxes these gigantic caverns? in many cases over 1000sq feet go unused. seems dumb even when your kids are little.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s a lot easier to do it gradually over time than to do it cold turkey all at once. We are in the camp who did not upgrade the house and cars as the income rose. The kids activities are expensive (but will end eventually) and we do like nice vacations. But we are pretty frugal on the day to day.
If you’ve been living high on the hog for 30+ years, I can’t imagine stopping will be easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before we retired we sold our single family home in the city and bought 2 condos, one at the beach and one in the city. Makes it very easy to close the door and walk away. HOA takes care of everything, packages, gardens, pool, security, maintenance.
Our life is so streamlined now, we don't really need a car as we can walk everywhere. One of our kids returned after college and we have plenty of room. We may just lend them $ to purchase something, we made plenty of money sending our house and downsizing.
Condos are not a good investment. Waste of money.