Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spent slightly less (1.8) and make slightly more (~$200) and it’s tight but doable. Maintenance costs are the biggest unknown and you definitely pay a wealth tax having an expensive home. Quotes for home repairs are always high. This year we had to replace a few windows, gutters, and a water heater. About $15K.
If I had an even more expensive house and even less income it would feel impossible. The definition of house poor....
I’m interested in hearing more. We make 2x the amount and are springing for $2M. We expect to eventually rent out the basement for $2k, but not relying on that to pay the mortgage or daily expenses. I know it will be tight for a while, just curious if you regret your purchase. Every which way I calculate it, and looking at worst case scenarios, we can make it work.
If you are factoring our renting the basement you really can’t afford it. Also very tack to live in such a neighborhood and turn your place
Into a multi family unit. Your neighbors will hate you. You don’t really belong. Stop.
Why would neighbors care if you rent out an asset? If it’s there why not make money off of it?
In neighborhoods with houses of $2 million, trust me when I say that there would be a huge stigma to renting out the basement. Your neighbors will look down on you and assume you are house poor. Trust me, as I speak from personal experience (as the person who was house poor).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spent slightly less (1.8) and make slightly more (~$200) and it’s tight but doable. Maintenance costs are the biggest unknown and you definitely pay a wealth tax having an expensive home. Quotes for home repairs are always high. This year we had to replace a few windows, gutters, and a water heater. About $15K.
If I had an even more expensive house and even less income it would feel impossible. The definition of house poor....
I’m interested in hearing more. We make 2x the amount and are springing for $2M. We expect to eventually rent out the basement for $2k, but not relying on that to pay the mortgage or daily expenses. I know it will be tight for a while, just curious if you regret your purchase. Every which way I calculate it, and looking at worst case scenarios, we can make it work.
If you are factoring our renting the basement you really can’t afford it. Also very tack to live in such a neighborhood and turn your place
Into a multi family unit. Your neighbors will hate you. You don’t really belong. Stop.
Why would neighbors care if you rent out an asset? If it’s there why not make money off of it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spent slightly less (1.8) and make slightly more (~$200) and it’s tight but doable. Maintenance costs are the biggest unknown and you definitely pay a wealth tax having an expensive home. Quotes for home repairs are always high. This year we had to replace a few windows, gutters, and a water heater. About $15K.
If I had an even more expensive house and even less income it would feel impossible. The definition of house poor....
I’m interested in hearing more. We make 2x the amount and are springing for $2M. We expect to eventually rent out the basement for $2k, but not relying on that to pay the mortgage or daily expenses. I know it will be tight for a while, just curious if you regret your purchase. Every which way I calculate it, and looking at worst case scenarios, we can make it work.
If you are factoring our renting the basement you really can’t afford it. Also very tack to live in such a neighborhood and turn your place
Into a multi family unit. Your neighbors will hate you. You don’t really belong. Stop.
Why would neighbors care if you rent out an asset? If it’s there why not make money off of it?
Anonymous wrote:What are the taxes on the home? At that price, they may Be like an income appropriate mortgage that will never end. So at local rates around here that’s $20k per year on taxes alone. Plus upkeep, dues, etc. Why be permanently house poor? Buy a million dollar house and keep some money in the bank.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spent slightly less (1.8) and make slightly more (~$200) and it’s tight but doable. Maintenance costs are the biggest unknown and you definitely pay a wealth tax having an expensive home. Quotes for home repairs are always high. This year we had to replace a few windows, gutters, and a water heater. About $15K.
If I had an even more expensive house and even less income it would feel impossible. The definition of house poor....
I’m interested in hearing more. We make 2x the amount and are springing for $2M. We expect to eventually rent out the basement for $2k, but not relying on that to pay the mortgage or daily expenses. I know it will be tight for a while, just curious if you regret your purchase. Every which way I calculate it, and looking at worst case scenarios, we can make it work.
If you are factoring our renting the basement you really can’t afford it. Also very tack to live in such a neighborhood and turn your place
Into a multi family unit. Your neighbors will hate you. You don’t really belong. Stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spent slightly less (1.8) and make slightly more (~$200) and it’s tight but doable. Maintenance costs are the biggest unknown and you definitely pay a wealth tax having an expensive home. Quotes for home repairs are always high. This year we had to replace a few windows, gutters, and a water heater. About $15K.
If I had an even more expensive house and even less income it would feel impossible. The definition of house poor....
I’m interested in hearing more. We make 2x the amount and are springing for $2M. We expect to eventually rent out the basement for $2k, but not relying on that to pay the mortgage or daily expenses. I know it will be tight for a while, just curious if you regret your purchase. Every which way I calculate it, and looking at worst case scenarios, we can make it work.
Anonymous wrote:I made $2.2M on the stock market. We have a HHI of $160k. Would it be insane to pay all cash for a $2M home? Yes, I realize there are taxes, insurance, closing costs etc. Can you still own a home with that price tag with a $160k HHI? Would taxes, insurance, etc. be untenable while essentially having no mortgage?
I don't really care about wiping out my brokerage account to $100-200k. Plenty saved in IRAs and 401ks. What else should I use the money for at this point? No other debts. Still lots more time to rebuild my brokerage account, and I actually do want to remove a lot my wealth from equities into real estate just to diversify.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spent slightly less (1.8) and make slightly more (~$200) and it’s tight but doable. Maintenance costs are the biggest unknown and you definitely pay a wealth tax having an expensive home. Quotes for home repairs are always high. This year we had to replace a few windows, gutters, and a water heater. About $15K.
If I had an even more expensive house and even less income it would feel impossible. The definition of house poor....
I’m interested in hearing more. We make 2x the amount and are springing for $2M. We expect to eventually rent out the basement for $2k, but not relying on that to pay the mortgage or daily expenses. I know it will be tight for a while, just curious if you regret your purchase. Every which way I calculate it, and looking at worst case scenarios, we can make it work.
Anonymous wrote:We spent slightly less (1.8) and make slightly more (~$200) and it’s tight but doable. Maintenance costs are the biggest unknown and you definitely pay a wealth tax having an expensive home. Quotes for home repairs are always high. This year we had to replace a few windows, gutters, and a water heater. About $15K.
If I had an even more expensive house and even less income it would feel impossible. The definition of house poor....