Anonymous wrote:Why do you need 3-5 bedrooms if you’re single? Get a 1 or 2 bedroom condo and then if you get married, buy something bigger together with your combined incomes.
Even if you had a stable job as a Fed, your salary is not high enough to afford a $1M home. The tech industry is a lot less stable. You can’t pay a $900k mortgage by yourself if you lose a job. I make what you do, and when DH recently quit his job, I was barely able to support us for the 6 months he was unemployed …with a $500K mortgage at 3%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From your 401k balance it sounds like you may be either a) somewhat early in your career or b)you haven’t been in a position to save all that much in retirement. Taking on a 1M house likely means saving less for retirement. Side note: hopefully you’re not thinking of liquidating any of your 401k to pay for the house- it’s a penalty on top of additional taxes.
1 m sounds like too much house. What type of house do you need? Are you supporting other family members?
Yes, I am relatively early career. Late 20s. Started maxing out on my 401k around 3 years ago. If I move forward with this purchase, I will continue to max out on 401k contributions; not planning to tamp that down.
No, I won’t be using my 401k for my down payment/closing costs. Just my brokerage/savings accounts.
I am looking for 3-5 bedrooms. There have been some price cuts, so one of the developments I am looking at is now has homes for $950k. There are other developments coming in the $700k-$850k range, but they will not be ready until end of 2024, early 2025. Obviously, I could get something smaller like a 1-2 bedroom but I would have to move in the foreseeable future. If I buy something with more space (3-4 rooms), I see myself staying for a long time.
Anonymous wrote:From your 401k balance it sounds like you may be either a) somewhat early in your career or b)you haven’t been in a position to save all that much in retirement. Taking on a 1M house likely means saving less for retirement. Side note: hopefully you’re not thinking of liquidating any of your 401k to pay for the house- it’s a penalty on top of additional taxes.
1 m sounds like too much house. What type of house do you need? Are you supporting other family members?
Anonymous wrote:OP, can you give us a little more info about your savings, how much you would get from cashing out of your home in Bethesda, and your prospects for a better job? Do you supervise staff now?
Anonymous wrote:New developments in DC are at this price point. Currently living in MD and want to move to the city. Some MD new builds are also at the $1M mark. Have $108k for a down payment. Remaining savings after down payment and closing costs will be $128k.
I have been looking at homes since February and it seems the longer I wait the more the interest rates increase and builder incentives/inventory go down. As of now, one builder is offering 5.875% for a 30-year fixed. That’s the best I can find.
Have been looking for a new job. But there’s little in the way of openings that are a substantive increase in comp/level; I’m in tech and the job market has softened incredibly.
I am hoping I can just buy now and my income situation will change in the next year or two.