Anonymous wrote:Vance is selling his Del Ray home. Relocating within the DMV or fleeing is the question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t imagine having this man for a neighbor. But on topic, I think people will cling to their 2-3% mortgages with everything they have. Some people who overextended in the past couple years with crazy rates and crazy prices might walk away but most people have tons of equity and low rates.
+1
If you have high taxes that is part of your PITI. A 3% mortgage on a $1.5M house with $20K in taxes is still a lot of money. The 3% mortgage won’t change that.
Anonymous wrote:There is a huge shortage of housing. People in DC often live in the in huge houses in the surburbs with room for tenants. So why sell.
My basement is sitting empty. It is 2,000 square feet with two bedrooms and a bathroom. No kitchen.
If broke I could put a cheap fridge in, microwave/convection oven combo and two burner electic stove top. Find some govt workers who live even further out and rent it for like $2,600 a month. Maybe 4 guys or ladies who are hybrid can rent it out if each only needs it three nights a week. I am right by NIH in Bethesda.
I would go down to one car. Even though I own my cars. I have to insure and maintain them all.
Cancel every subscription.
if necessary I move in to a tiny basement place and rent out my whole house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t imagine having this man for a neighbor. But on topic, I think people will cling to their 2-3% mortgages with everything they have. Some people who overextended in the past couple years with crazy rates and crazy prices might walk away but most people have tons of equity and low rates.
+1
Anonymous wrote:There is a huge shortage of housing. People in DC often live in the in huge houses in the surburbs with room for tenants. So why sell.
My basement is sitting empty. It is 2,000 square feet with two bedrooms and a bathroom. No kitchen.
If broke I could put a cheap fridge in, microwave/convection oven combo and two burner electic stove top. Find some govt workers who live even further out and rent it for like $2,600 a month. Maybe 4 guys or ladies who are hybrid can rent it out if each only needs it three nights a week. I am right by NIH in Bethesda.
I would go down to one car. Even though I own my cars. I have to insure and maintain them all.
Cancel every subscription.
if necessary I move in to a tiny basement place and rent out my whole house.
Anonymous wrote:There is a huge shortage of housing. People in DC often live in the in huge houses in the surburbs with room for tenants. So why sell.
My basement is sitting empty. It is 2,000 square feet with two bedrooms and a bathroom. No kitchen.
If broke I could put a cheap fridge in, microwave/convection oven combo and two burner electic stove top. Find some govt workers who live even further out and rent it for like $2,600 a month. Maybe 4 guys or ladies who are hybrid can rent it out if each only needs it three nights a week. I am right by NIH in Bethesda.
I would go down to one car. Even though I own my cars. I have to insure and maintain them all.
Cancel every subscription.
if necessary I move in to a tiny basement place and rent out my whole house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not a fed and have a fairly stable job (I hope!). Even with a 2.6% mortgage, if I lost my job, I’d sell or lease my house if I didn’t find another job quickly to reduce costs.
The problem with DC is that many former Fed employees will need to relocate to another town or city. This is a company town.
Yeah our mortgage is just too high to sustain without a job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not a fed and have a fairly stable job (I hope!). Even with a 2.6% mortgage, if I lost my job, I’d sell or lease my house if I didn’t find another job quickly to reduce costs.
The problem with DC is that many former Fed employees will need to relocate to another town or city. This is a company town.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not a fed and have a fairly stable job (I hope!). Even with a 2.6% mortgage, if I lost my job, I’d sell or lease my house if I didn’t find another job quickly to reduce costs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t imagine having this man for a neighbor. But on topic, I think people will cling to their 2-3% mortgages with everything they have. Some people who overextended in the past couple years with crazy rates and crazy prices might walk away but most people have tons of equity and low rates.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Can’t imagine having this man for a neighbor. But on topic, I think people will cling to their 2-3% mortgages with everything they have. Some people who overextended in the past couple years with crazy rates and crazy prices might walk away but most people have tons of equity and low rates.