Anonymous wrote:Depends how much you put down. In Potomac and Bethesda a realtor said average downpayment is 40 percent. Makes sense who can afford the mortgage otherwise.
I work at a bank and we have a few Piggyback customers lately. The do a 30 years fixed mortgage combined with an adjustable ARM at same time. Theory is they are dual income they aggressively pay off ARM prior to adjustment then wife when kids come if wants to be SAHM or one loses job they are comfortable as only the smaller 30 year fixed is left.
For instance buy a 1.5 million dollars home. Get a 30 year mortgage of 800K, get a ARM of 400K and put down 300K. Then couple starts with low interest rate 10/1 year Teaser ARM starts prepaying that aggressively while dual income. By year 10 ARM done, by then second or third kid on way, working may not make sense for Mom and she goes part time or SAHM. The neighbors all wonder how she can afford it, but reality they just worked their butts off. Or could be husband loses job and he could be stay at home. Or both lose jobs down the road in a recession The first few years are risky. But taking a large 30 years mortgage is also very risky if you lose your job as it is high all 30 years.
It is no longer 2000 or 2018 where home prices only go up and mortgage rates only go down. We could get more mortgage rates up and home prices up.
Anonymous wrote:It really depends on housing. I know many dual fed couples in Arlington, but they bought a while ago.
I also know families in apartments or condos, but many wouldn't be okay with that and want a SFH. Those family love being walkable and the community that comes with shared spaces like the local playground.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have done fine with <$250k.
Fine and Comfortable are two different things
Comfortable is having a 4k sq foot house, with a decent yard, decent cars, substantial annual savings, no financial stress, can cash flow any urgent need without thinking, etc
Fine is living an acceptable house, old cars, maxing 401(k)s but that's really it, but still having to worry about money or contemplate bigger purchases
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bought in 2022, in Rockville at age 28. Hhi of 390k. We’re comfortable but if we had bought in Bethesda, we would have been tight. But part of my budget is aggressively saving for an early retirement at 45 so that affects what we’re willing to spend
I think Bethesda is doable on 350k-400k but depends on your spending habits and goals
Rockville lol. This thread isn’t for you.
I find it very comfortable.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have done fine with <$250k.
Fine and Comfortable are two different things
Comfortable is having a 4k sq foot house, with a decent yard, decent cars, substantial annual savings, no financial stress, can cash flow any urgent need without thinking, etc
Fine is living an acceptable house, old cars, maxing 401(k)s but that's really it, but still having to worry about money or contemplate bigger purchases
Anonymous wrote:We have done fine with <$250k.
Anonymous wrote:This basically boils down to how much income to afford at least a 1.3 million dollar house (with a million-ish dollar mortgage). Assuming this translates to roughly $8,000 monthly payment (with escrows) then you could do it on 300K a year, but many would prefer not to. Maybe 350-400K is more reasonable.