Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can build a new house for 500k
Not around the DMV. House prices are skyrocketing, you can’t get a close-in tear down for under 700k.
I’m going to go against the grain here and say do it. If you love your neighborhood, and you can’t easily move into something you like more, why not? You have 800k in “family savings?” Go ahead and spend a chunk and stay in the house for the next 20-30 years.
Anonymous wrote:OP here- our house is a relatively recent build (80’s) and more of a mid century style. So it’s got light and space (4 bedrooms upstairs, 2 bedrooms in the basement), 3.5 baths. So it’s fine, but the kitchen-dining-living area is from the 70’s and it would be pretty phenomenal if we would open it up and enlarge it with an addition and a deck. But probably not $500k more phenomenal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- it would be a three story renovation. House is on a hill, so expanding/renovating the kitchen, adding room to the second floor above the kitchen, adding room to the basement, adding a deck, and expanding into our front portico.
It seemed absurd to me as well, so glad I’m not being cheap.
500k is not absurd in the DC area for this much work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- it would be a three story renovation. House is on a hill, so expanding/renovating the kitchen, adding room to the second floor above the kitchen, adding room to the basement, adding a deck, and expanding into our front portico.
It seemed absurd to me as well, so glad I’m not being cheap.
500k is not absurd in the DC area for this much work.
Of course it is, but there is the Bethesda premium for people who don’t know any better.
Anonymous wrote:We spent that much on a reno 10 years ago. In retrospect we probably should have moved. While we will make our money back, the market for renovated Colonials in our neighborhood is lower than the market for tear downs/new builds. So the prices of Colonials has stagnated some. It was worth it from a QOL perspective, and the reno has held up 10-11 years later, but for market reasons it wasn’t the best financial decision.
Our financial situation was stronger than yours at the time (higher income, higher savings, very high home equity we could tap into) so it was lower risk. In your situation I think $500k is a lot unless you have very high equity in your house.
Anonymous wrote:You can build a new house for 500k
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- it would be a three story renovation. House is on a hill, so expanding/renovating the kitchen, adding room to the second floor above the kitchen, adding room to the basement, adding a deck, and expanding into our front portico.
It seemed absurd to me as well, so glad I’m not being cheap.
500k is not absurd in the DC area for this much work.