Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are you going to live in retirement? Buy a house
You know many, many seniors live in rental apartments, right? RIGHT? Surely you must know this.
I do. I looked for MOCO and just as I expected “Due to long waiting lists for public housing, HOC’s list is not accepting new applicants.” Millennials are a huge generation the size of boomers, they and gen x will likely already have all the units. A house gives you security and doesn’t throw away rents you can leave to your kids Op
Not always true. My Aunt died at 93 recently and was massively rich due to never owning.
She died in the same apt her and husband first rented in 1955. A three bedroom, two bath rent controlled NYC apartment. And had a very rare parking spot included.
Her whole life never paid property tax, mortgage, home insurance, heating bill, home maint, bought an appliance. Paid a water bill, paid for garbage pick up or lawn service instead she had tons of cash to buy stocks and bonds.
In retirement her monthly rent was $700 a month and her husband a retired police captain had a $100,000 a year pension tax free as went out on disability.
Neither went to college were HS sweethearts. If anything not owning a home was key to their wealth.
In her case her one some is the CEO of a hedge fund so her money was well invested the other son a CFO.
She lived in that apartment 70 years
not exactly a typical situation.
Not to mention this is the same guy who keeps posting these amazing situations.
Exactly!
What about all those who aren’t lucky enough to score a 1955 rent controlled apartment?
Rent controlled apartments do not increase affordability in general. They benefit the lucky few, while also creating a disincentive to build more apartments to increase the supply and take the pressure off rents. Actually pretty regressive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re over 50 and still not there…
Thank you for your honest response. I’m not there either. This board makes me feel bad about it sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are you going to live in retirement? Buy a house
You know many, many seniors live in rental apartments, right? RIGHT? Surely you must know this.
I do. I looked for MOCO and just as I expected “Due to long waiting lists for public housing, HOC’s list is not accepting new applicants.” Millennials are a huge generation the size of boomers, they and gen x will likely already have all the units. A house gives you security and doesn’t throw away rents you can leave to your kids Op
Not always true. My Aunt died at 93 recently and was massively rich due to never owning.
She died in the same apt her and husband first rented in 1955. A three bedroom, two bath rent controlled NYC apartment. And had a very rare parking spot included.
Her whole life never paid property tax, mortgage, home insurance, heating bill, home maint, bought an appliance. Paid a water bill, paid for garbage pick up or lawn service instead she had tons of cash to buy stocks and bonds.
In retirement her monthly rent was $700 a month and her husband a retired police captain had a $100,000 a year pension tax free as went out on disability.
Neither went to college were HS sweethearts. If anything not owning a home was key to their wealth.
In her case her one some is the CEO of a hedge fund so her money was well invested the other son a CFO.
She lived in that apartment 70 years
not exactly a typical situation.
Not to mention this is the same guy who keeps posting these amazing situations.
Anonymous wrote:OP here! You guys have given me hope! I’m a divorced mom that just turned 40 and was feeling bad about myself because I’ve never owned a home. Hopefully I’ll be able to within the next few years!