Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Live in one and grew up in one and always lived in one.
Condos are convenient: my family traveled a lot so it was very easy to turn the key and just leave and never have to worry about maintenance.
Even in a townhouse you have to worry about the backyard, what to do with trash, security of the place etc.
Condos fill a niche and aren't for everyone but if you routinely travel and want something in a good location then they work.
Also space wise, if you purchase a larger sized one (which you should if you're a family) they really don't feel smaller than a house and it's all one floor living which makes it so much easier.
+1 on condo living and I can always find them at a discount every time I move and put the difference into the market.
+1 this is one of the reasons we're looking at a condo. We are planning to travel a lot and just want to be able to lockup and go.
Plus:
- no more yard maintenance. We have a huge yard. It was great when the kids were young, but they are now in college, and we don't want to deal with yard maintenance anymore
- I do want access to a pool and gym in the complex. I hate the idea of driving to the gym.
- I do want some walkability.
I'm also ok with < ~$700 for the amenities and convenience.
Anonymous wrote:Live in one and grew up in one and always lived in one.
Condos are convenient: my family traveled a lot so it was very easy to turn the key and just leave and never have to worry about maintenance.
Even in a townhouse you have to worry about the backyard, what to do with trash, security of the place etc.
Condos fill a niche and aren't for everyone but if you routinely travel and want something in a good location then they work.
Also space wise, if you purchase a larger sized one (which you should if you're a family) they really don't feel smaller than a house and it's all one floor living which makes it so much easier.
+1 on condo living and I can always find them at a discount every time I move and put the difference into the market.
Anonymous wrote:Live in one and grew up in one and always lived in one.
Condos are convenient: my family traveled a lot so it was very easy to turn the key and just leave and never have to worry about maintenance.
Even in a townhouse you have to worry about the backyard, what to do with trash, security of the place etc.
Condos fill a niche and aren't for everyone but if you routinely travel and want something in a good location then they work.
Also space wise, if you purchase a larger sized one (which you should if you're a family) they really don't feel smaller than a house and it's all one floor living which makes it so much easier.
+1 on condo living and I can always find them at a discount every time I move and put the difference into the market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My house my property tax is $5,500, property tax $17,000. Lawn service $2,500 a year.
Like $25,000 a year yet folks think $1,000 a month if crazy on a condo fee
I was going to point the same thing out…
Owning a SFH is the most expensive proposition…for all the things you mentioned….plus cars, gas and car insurance…
If I could unload all of that, buy a condo, I would be so happy.
So do it, there is nothing stopping you. List your house tomorrow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My house my property tax is $5,500, property tax $17,000. Lawn service $2,500 a year.
Like $25,000 a year yet folks think $1,000 a month if crazy on a condo fee
I was going to point the same thing out…
Owning a SFH is the most expensive proposition…for all the things you mentioned….plus cars, gas and car insurance…
If I could unload all of that, buy a condo, I would be so happy.
Anonymous wrote:My house my property tax is $5,500, property tax $17,000. Lawn service $2,500 a year.
Like $25,000 a year yet folks think $1,000 a month if crazy on a condo fee
Anonymous wrote:I had a condo to the metro which saved me $5 in parking daily ($100 a month)
Nice gym that I used daily
Nice pool that I used weekly
Everything was well maintained.
Condos have cheap insurance. You only have to pay for walls in, so the price is similar to renters insurance. Nothing like homeowners insurance.
Anonymous wrote:Even with incredibly high condo fees? Help me understand why…