Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. Stoneleigh sounds great! Is it the kind of neighborhood where the kids are out playing together, riding their bikes around the neighborhood , etc. like in the 80’s? I would love that for my kids.
It’s not a cul de sac neighborhood, and the streets are a bit too trafficky for kids playing in them, but it is walkable to the public schools and swim club. The only downside is very limited inventory, and that the houses tend to be on the smaller side.
Anonymous wrote:NP. Stoneleigh sounds great! Is it the kind of neighborhood where the kids are out playing together, riding their bikes around the neighborhood , etc. like in the 80’s? I would love that for my kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. Stoneleigh sounds great! Is it the kind of neighborhood where the kids are out playing together, riding their bikes around the neighborhood , etc. like in the 80’s? I would love that for my kids.
It’s not a cul de sac neighborhood, and the streets are a bit too trafficky for kids playing in them, but it is walkable to the public schools and swim club. The only downside is very limited inventory, and that the houses tend to be on the smaller side.
Anonymous wrote:NP. Stoneleigh sounds great! Is it the kind of neighborhood where the kids are out playing together, riding their bikes around the neighborhood , etc. like in the 80’s? I would love that for my kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind with respect to houses, there generally is an offsetting price difference in the city due to taxes,i.e. your monthly costs of owning, including mortgage, remain roughly equal due to lower prices per square foot. That has gone away a bit as there are far more updated housing in the city and more people valuing walk ability and a shorter commute than a decade or so ago, but still exists to some extent.
The honest answer is that for all the North Baltimore neighborhoods, including close in county, like Towson and Stoneleigh, there is very high level of demand for well priced properties. Most will sell within a week of listing. If I were op I would connect with a realtor and start touring neighborhoods now. Spring market starts in mid January.
Roughly equal to the county.
Not exactly. I will take a higher mortgage and interest expense (which is fully tax deductible) in a safer area with better schhols and lower crime - than a cheaper house in Baltimore City with worse schools, more crime and very high property taxes. And property taxes are not fully tax deductible as they are subject to the SALT limitations/guidelines.
Regardless - you get what you pay for. Buy in the best public school district and it will be far easier to sell than a house in Balt. City.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind with respect to houses, there generally is an offsetting price difference in the city due to taxes,i.e. your monthly costs of owning, including mortgage, remain roughly equal due to lower prices per square foot. That has gone away a bit as there are far more updated housing in the city and more people valuing walk ability and a shorter commute than a decade or so ago, but still exists to some extent.
The honest answer is that for all the North Baltimore neighborhoods, including close in county, like Towson and Stoneleigh, there is very high level of demand for well priced properties. Most will sell within a week of listing. If I were op I would connect with a realtor and start touring neighborhoods now. Spring market starts in mid January.
Roughly equal to the county.
Not exactly. I will take a higher mortgage and interest expense (which is fully tax deductible) in a safer area with better schhols and lower crime - than a cheaper house in Baltimore City with worse schools, more crime and very high property taxes. And property taxes are not fully tax deductible as they are subject to the SALT limitations/guidelines.
Regardless - you get what you pay for. Buy in the best public school district and it will be far easier to sell than a house in Balt. City.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind with respect to houses, there generally is an offsetting price difference in the city due to taxes,i.e. your monthly costs of owning, including mortgage, remain roughly equal due to lower prices per square foot. That has gone away a bit as there are far more updated housing in the city and more people valuing walk ability and a shorter commute than a decade or so ago, but still exists to some extent.
The honest answer is that for all the North Baltimore neighborhoods, including close in county, like Towson and Stoneleigh, there is very high level of demand for well priced properties. Most will sell within a week of listing. If I were op I would connect with a realtor and start touring neighborhoods now. Spring market starts in mid January.
Roughly equal to the county.
Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind with respect to houses, there generally is an offsetting price difference in the city due to taxes,i.e. your monthly costs of owning, including mortgage, remain roughly equal due to lower prices per square foot. That has gone away a bit as there are far more updated housing in the city and more people valuing walk ability and a shorter commute than a decade or so ago, but still exists to some extent.
The honest answer is that for all the North Baltimore neighborhoods, including close in county, like Towson and Stoneleigh, there is very high level of demand for well priced properties. Most will sell within a week of listing. If I were op I would connect with a realtor and start touring neighborhoods now. Spring market starts in mid January.