Anonymous wrote:I'm starting a family and we decided a new build townhome is best for the next decade. No issues to deal with, warranty, and when we eventually outgrow the 2500 Sq ft of space, I'll keep it and rent it out.
It's much easier than dealing with an old house that wasn't cared for and you're dropping big money every month fixing repair after repair after repair. No thank you. Plus newer builds are much more energy efficient than old homes.
Anonymous wrote:Considering my brother was just hired to dig a foundation of a "new custom build" in Arlington where the people are surely paying well over 2M for the home and he has never in his life dug a foundation, I'm not too confident in new builds. I wouldn't allow my brother to remodel batheoom let alone dig a foundation. I have zero faith in new construction in this area. It is so hard to find workers to do anything, thr criteria is a heartbeat and that's all.
terrible why didn't the previous owners keep upAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know. We bought a 70 year old house. We have small kids and put about $15k into repairs in the first six months. It sucked.
But we haven't had another thing pop up over the next three years. I'm still happy with our choice.
+1 We bought a 90 year old house knowing we'd have to put in new windows. We ended up needing to do about $10k worth of plumbing work on top of that in the first year. 4 years later, nothing else has cropped up. Love our house.
I grew up in a house built in 1890 and my first home purchase was 1881. Incredible craftsmanship in both, but I still had to update appliances, so some remedial electric work, replace windows, refinish or replace the wood floors. That’s just part of the deal. It sounds like OP chose the wrong old house for their lifestyle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know. We bought a 70 year old house. We have small kids and put about $15k into repairs in the first six months. It sucked.
But we haven't had another thing pop up over the next three years. I'm still happy with our choice.
+1 We bought a 90 year old house knowing we'd have to put in new windows. We ended up needing to do about $10k worth of plumbing work on top of that in the first year. 4 years later, nothing else has cropped up. Love our house.
Anonymous wrote:All houses are money pits, OP
Anonymous wrote:I'm starting a family and we decided a new build townhome is best for the next decade. No issues to deal with, warranty, and when we eventually outgrow the 2500 Sq ft of space, I'll keep it and rent it out.
It's much easier than dealing with an old house that wasn't cared for and you're dropping big money every month fixing repair after repair after repair. No thank you. Plus newer builds are much more energy efficient than old homes.