Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's see now...
Rent for 2 years @ $3000/month = $72000
Rent for 5 years @ $3000/month = $180,000
I'm sorry but I would rather buy a house, build equity and then sell it.
A 3k rental is not the same property as a 600k property
You can rent the property annually, or you can rent the money and sign up for 30 yrs
Interest and taxes alone for first year probably 25k and you are a vulnerable short term investor in this scenario. Just gambling to try and save 180k (rent) - 120k (interest + property tax) = 60 k. With the crappy homes 600k will buy you, 60k in repairs over 5 years would be easy to rack up. Granted tax deduction helps, as long as not repealed and you avoid AMT. but if market here wobbles from sequester or rising rates, your limited time horizon leaves you exposed.
End of day, in DC real estate 180k is peanuts; you have to be committed to the long term to be safer. That said, if have the cash flow and resources, keeping as rental could be option. But I have any friends who ate cash flow negative on their properties so you better be able to bridge that if you go that route.
I just left the DC area after 5 years. Spent $800,000+ on a house we bought at the top of the market. Easily put $60,000+ plus into it. Sold it for about $10,000 less than we paid. With the realtor's commission, we lost close to $100,000 overall. It would have been much better for us to rent. Of course, we had thought we were staying for longer than 5 years. But given your budget and time frame, I would rent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's see now...
Rent for 2 years @ $3000/month = $72000
Rent for 5 years @ $3000/month = $180,000
I'm sorry but I would rather buy a house, build equity and then sell it.
A 3k rental is not the same property as a 600k property
You can rent the property annually, or you can rent the money and sign up for 30 yrs
Interest and taxes alone for first year probably 25k and you are a vulnerable short term investor in this scenario. Just gambling to try and save 180k (rent) - 120k (interest + property tax) = 60 k. With the crappy homes 600k will buy you, 60k in repairs over 5 years would be easy to rack up. Granted tax deduction helps, as long as not repealed and you avoid AMT. but if market here wobbles from sequester or rising rates, your limited time horizon leaves you exposed.
End of day, in DC real estate 180k is peanuts; you have to be committed to the long term to be safer. That said, if have the cash flow and resources, keeping as rental could be option. But I have any friends who ate cash flow negative on their properties so you better be able to bridge that if you go that route.
I just left the DC area after 5 years. Spent $800,000+ on a house we bought at the top of the market. Easily put $60,000+ plus into it. Sold it for about $10,000 less than we paid. With the realtor's commission, we lost close to $100,000 overall. It would have been much better for us to rent. Of course, we had thought we were staying for longer than 5 years. But given your budget and time frame, I would rent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's see now...
Rent for 2 years @ $3000/month = $72000
Rent for 5 years @ $3000/month = $180,000
I'm sorry but I would rather buy a house, build equity and then sell it.
A 3k rental is not the same property as a 600k property
You can rent the property annually, or you can rent the money and sign up for 30 yrs
Interest and taxes alone for first year probably 25k and you are a vulnerable short term investor in this scenario. Just gambling to try and save 180k (rent) - 120k (interest + property tax) = 60 k. With the crappy homes 600k will buy you, 60k in repairs over 5 years would be easy to rack up. Granted tax deduction helps, as long as not repealed and you avoid AMT. but if market here wobbles from sequester or rising rates, your limited time horizon leaves you exposed.
End of day, in DC real estate 180k is peanuts; you have to be committed to the long term to be safer. That said, if have the cash flow and resources, keeping as rental could be option. But I have any friends who ate cash flow negative on their properties so you better be able to bridge that if you go that route.
Anonymous wrote:Let's see now...
Rent for 2 years @ $3000/month = $72000
Rent for 5 years @ $3000/month = $180,000
I'm sorry but I would rather buy a house, build equity and then sell it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, I pulled a listing in Pimmit Hills and all assigned schools in that particular area are rated 9/10. I did notice that the houses are small and older. But looks promsing since you said the area is getting new development and schools are great too.
LOLOLOLOLOL
Nice set up, PH booster. I'll give you that.
Pimmit Hills is still the armpit of NOVA though.
LOL must be a new booster
Because booster is gone or is a legit post