Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's your mid-range plan? Marriage? Kids? Sticking with DC? I would not buy any property unless I planned to live in it for a good 5 years just because of the transaction costs (closing fees, realtor fees when selling, etc.)
My family is in the area and I plan on staying here as long as the job market for tech is strong.
From my anecdotal experience dating in the area, very few girls in my age range (22-27) are looking to settle down. I would eventually like to get married + kids, but that's probably 5-10 years down the road.
Women. If they're above 18, they're women. Not girls.
Np: oh, please - stop nitpicking. I'm a 45 yo woman and still say "girls" - you knew what he meant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's your mid-range plan? Marriage? Kids? Sticking with DC? I would not buy any property unless I planned to live in it for a good 5 years just because of the transaction costs (closing fees, realtor fees when selling, etc.)
My family is in the area and I plan on staying here as long as the job market for tech is strong.
From my anecdotal experience dating in the area, very few girls in my age range (22-27) are looking to settle down. I would eventually like to get married + kids, but that's probably 5-10 years down the road.
Women. If they're above 18, they're women. Not girls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's your mid-range plan? Marriage? Kids? Sticking with DC? I would not buy any property unless I planned to live in it for a good 5 years just because of the transaction costs (closing fees, realtor fees when selling, etc.)
My family is in the area and I plan on staying here as long as the job market for tech is strong.
From my anecdotal experience dating in the area, very few girls in my age range (22-27) are looking to settle down. I would eventually like to get married + kids, but that's probably 5-10 years down the road.
Women. If they're above 18, they're women. Not girls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's your mid-range plan? Marriage? Kids? Sticking with DC? I would not buy any property unless I planned to live in it for a good 5 years just because of the transaction costs (closing fees, realtor fees when selling, etc.)
My family is in the area and I plan on staying here as long as the job market for tech is strong.
From my anecdotal experience dating in the area, very few girls in my age range (22-27) are looking to settle down. I would eventually like to get married + kids, but that's probably 5-10 years down the road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, condo fees are the real issue. Def look at the financials for the condo association first. But your numbers sound good.
and condo fees can increase a lot unexpectedly
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With rents decreasing in DC it's probably much better financially to rent in a luxury building. Check out the buy vs rent calculator on the NY Times.
+1 rents are going down down down
Is this a joke?
The smallest 2 bedroom in a decent neighborhood is at least $2800 plus utilities
OP is not getting a two-bedroom in PQ for 450k. So comparing apples to apples, OP could rent a one-bedroom in a luxury building in Logan Circle for 1.9k/mo.
Wait, this is a 1 BR condo? OP, do not buy a 1 BR condo.
It's a 1BR. Why do you say not to buy a 1BR?
Anonymous wrote:What's your mid-range plan? Marriage? Kids? Sticking with DC? I would not buy any property unless I planned to live in it for a good 5 years just because of the transaction costs (closing fees, realtor fees when selling, etc.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With rents decreasing in DC it's probably much better financially to rent in a luxury building. Check out the buy vs rent calculator on the NY Times.
+1 rents are going down down down
Is this a joke?
The smallest 2 bedroom in a decent neighborhood is at least $2800 plus utilities
OP is not getting a two-bedroom in PQ for 450k. So comparing apples to apples, OP could rent a one-bedroom in a luxury building in Logan Circle for 1.9k/mo.
Wait, this is a 1 BR condo? OP, do not buy a 1 BR condo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please.tell me the field you are.in to make 6 figures in your 20s so I can encourage same education for daughter
+1
You beat me to it. I don't know any 25 year-olds that make 110k. Maybe there are a handful of BigLaw associates that fit the bill, but no way any of them have saved 100k through their own toil.
I would encourage OP to look at the condominium's financials. If there isn't a sufficient reserve fund, expensive repairs will have to be funded through special assessments against unit owners and they can be big - five figures.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With rents decreasing in DC it's probably much better financially to rent in a luxury building. Check out the buy vs rent calculator on the NY Times.
+1 rents are going down down down
Is this a joke?
The smallest 2 bedroom in a decent neighborhood is at least $2800 plus utilities
OP is not getting a two-bedroom in PQ for 450k. So comparing apples to apples, OP could rent a one-bedroom in a luxury building in Logan Circle for 1.9k/mo.
Wait, this is a 1 BR condo? OP, do not buy a 1 BR condo.
As if a two-bedroom condo is easier to rent. Right now, mortgage payments (for the most part, in DC proper and in desirable neighborhoods) are exceeding the cost of rents. Not a good sign for housing, generally.
Source? I'm a landlord and this is not my experience at all.
Anonymous wrote:Op, you better off buying a small home in a nice area or townhouse.
Condo at that price is a lot, unless you are in NYC!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With rents decreasing in DC it's probably much better financially to rent in a luxury building. Check out the buy vs rent calculator on the NY Times.
+1 rents are going down down down
Is this a joke?
The smallest 2 bedroom in a decent neighborhood is at least $2800 plus utilities
OP is not getting a two-bedroom in PQ for 450k. So comparing apples to apples, OP could rent a one-bedroom in a luxury building in Logan Circle for 1.9k/mo.
Wait, this is a 1 BR condo? OP, do not buy a 1 BR condo.
As if a two-bedroom condo is easier to rent. Right now, mortgage payments (for the most part, in DC proper and in desirable neighborhoods) are exceeding the cost of rents. Not a good sign for housing, generally.
Source? I'm a landlord and this is not my experience at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With rents decreasing in DC it's probably much better financially to rent in a luxury building. Check out the buy vs rent calculator on the NY Times.
+1 rents are going down down down
Is this a joke?
The smallest 2 bedroom in a decent neighborhood is at least $2800 plus utilities
OP is not getting a two-bedroom in PQ for 450k. So comparing apples to apples, OP could rent a one-bedroom in a luxury building in Logan Circle for 1.9k/mo.
Wait, this is a 1 BR condo? OP, do not buy a 1 BR condo.
As if a two-bedroom condo is easier to rent. Right now, mortgage payments (for the most part, in DC proper and in desirable neighborhoods) are exceeding the cost of rents. Not a good sign for housing, generally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With rents decreasing in DC it's probably much better financially to rent in a luxury building. Check out the buy vs rent calculator on the NY Times.
+1 rents are going down down down
Is this a joke?
The smallest 2 bedroom in a decent neighborhood is at least $2800 plus utilities
OP is not getting a two-bedroom in PQ for 450k. So comparing apples to apples, OP could rent a one-bedroom in a luxury building in Logan Circle for 1.9k/mo.
Wait, this is a 1 BR condo? OP, do not buy a 1 BR condo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With rents decreasing in DC it's probably much better financially to rent in a luxury building. Check out the buy vs rent calculator on the NY Times.
+1 rents are going down down down
Is this a joke?
The smallest 2 bedroom in a decent neighborhood is at least $2800 plus utilities
OP is not getting a two-bedroom in PQ for 450k. So comparing apples to apples, OP could rent a one-bedroom in a luxury building in Logan Circle for 1.9k/mo.