Anonymous wrote:Another option is renting out your spaces when you aren't using them. You may need management company to help you out with the beach house, but most are great seasonal rentals. If you buy a condo in DC you can legally airbnb as long as it is your primary residence. There are limits on nights you can host when you aren't there, but you should make enough to cover your fees. You would be able to afford to buy a bigger condo this way. It's not for everyone, but it's a way to stretch your dollar if you cannot otherwise afford to keep 2 big expensive places. You can always downsize later when it becomes unbearable or the luster of living in 2 places wears off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't afford to keep both
Haven't you been keeping both all these years?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1 bedroom condo. Pretty soon your kids will be established adults who can get a hotel when they visit
they won't visit much. especially once they get kids. If you want kids to visit you need to host them at a house or a bigger condo, They can come to the beach house to visit and city condo would have to be used on turn by turn basis.
Depends how close the beach house is to the airport. It's harder with kids to fly in, rent a car, and drive 3-4 hours to a beach condo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1 bedroom condo. Pretty soon your kids will be established adults who can get a hotel when they visit
they won't visit much. especially once they get kids. If you want kids to visit you need to host them at a house or a bigger condo, They can come to the beach house to visit and city condo would have to be used on turn by turn basis.
Anonymous wrote:DC itself is a swamp prone to flooding so selling beach house and moving to DC if we really had global warming makes no sense.
Reality is it moved an inch or two a year. You and your kids long dead before anything happens
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC itself is a swamp prone to flooding so selling beach house and moving to DC if we really had global warming makes no sense.
Reality is it moved an inch or two a year. You and your kids long dead before anything happens
Oh dear.
This whole post is nuts, but it all stems form the bolded.
Exactly, global warming is already happening. Coastal areas by the virtue of being at sea level will be significantly more prone to flooding. You cannot avoid damaging floods by moving an inch or two. And you will not be able to get flood insurance so you will have to pay for the flood damage every time it happens.
Anonymous wrote:1 bedroom condo. Pretty soon your kids will be established adults who can get a hotel when they visit
Anonymous wrote:I would wait until all the college age kids finish college, and then make a decision.
Right now, your kids will be coming back home for holidays and maybe summers, and need a place to stay. After graduation and starting work, they probably won't have time to see you very much.
Stay in your current house until they all graduate, and then move to whatever retirement location you would like. Be sure if it's not big enough to fit your kids, that there are local affordable hotels and rentals available.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC itself is a swamp prone to flooding so selling beach house and moving to DC if we really had global warming makes no sense.
Reality is it moved an inch or two a year. You and your kids long dead before anything happens
Oh dear.
This whole post is nuts, but it all stems form the bolded.
Anonymous wrote:DC itself is a swamp prone to flooding so selling beach house and moving to DC if we really had global warming makes no sense.
Reality is it moved an inch or two a year. You and your kids long dead before anything happens
Anonymous wrote:Thanks, everyone. It's actually helpful to think these through with a bunch of strangers!
I agree with the poster who said that adult children need to have a "home" to come home to. Yes, that's important to me also. If it weren't for climate change, I'd just make our beach house (which is a block from the beach but looks like a traditional house) our home. But we know we need to sell it within the next decade to avoid the mess that our island is going to become.
I'll keep looking for options. Maybe we can find a small townhouse for what our current house would sell for. It's partly those crazy expensive HOA costs that seem to be pricing us out.
Anonymous wrote:Can't afford to keep both