Yea, I agree. We did the same thing as you. We bought a really nice place on 7 beautiful acres with a pool about 90-100 minutes west of the DMV just outside of a small historic town. Not only is it far more convenient than the DE/MD beaches, it's a nice area to visit regardless of the season. Unlike a beach town, it's not jam packed in the summer, dead in the winter, and focused exclusively on tourism.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a home in Bethany. The people claiming it isn’t an easy drive to the DE beaches are they knew who don’t own there - one of the huge benefits of owning is that you can time your travel to non-peak times because there is no check-in day or time. Only once this summer did we hit any traffic delay of more than 15 minutes, but we often head there Friday morning and return Monday night.
Yeah people who claim there is a ton of traffic really don’t go there often. I can’t remember the last time we hit any traffic of significance (more than a 15 minute delay) and even then it has been due to an accident.
Maybe true, but it's still a pretty long ride . . . to a mediocre beach.
My biggest issue is the traffic once you are there. If you need to run out for a "quick" errand you can get stuck in a massive traffic jam.
Depends on location, time of year and day of week. But tourist season can be tough on Coastal Highway.
Yeah, we stop for groceries on the way in, then don’t use the car again until we leave.
Yeah, sounds like a great "vacation" if you have to plan your entire stay around avoiding everybody and everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Investment beach front condo in North Myrtle Beach. We usually go in December and a couple weeks mid to late June. Quick flight or 8 hour drive. Makes great money and we aren't sit at the beach all day people so a few weeks a year where we can see and hear the ocean from inside or walk down works for us.
Vacation house at Lake Anna. Friday traffic is bad, but other days a quick trip.
I would get a another home in Colorado, but at this stage of life we would not be able to use it much.
Good for you. Other posters would insist this is a "vacation" property. Which, as you know, it isn't.
Why so hung up on labels, PP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Investment beach front condo in North Myrtle Beach. We usually go in December and a couple weeks mid to late June. Quick flight or 8 hour drive. Makes great money and we aren't sit at the beach all day people so a few weeks a year where we can see and hear the ocean from inside or walk down works for us.
Vacation house at Lake Anna. Friday traffic is bad, but other days a quick trip.
I would get a another home in Colorado, but at this stage of life we would not be able to use it much.
Good for you. Other posters would insist this is a "vacation" property. Which, as you know, it isn't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the pp. can’t it br both? All homes purchased are considered an investment aren’t they? We go one weekend a month approx year round, few days at Thanksgiving and Christmas. And yes block out a week in August. It’s both.Anonymous wrote:Ok, let's make one thing clear: if you rent it out, it's not a "vacation house." It's an investment. If you "have a condo in Rehoboth" and "block out a week" for yourself, it's an investment.
Got it?
Nope. It's an investment property that you make personal use of on occasion. We've been there, and done that. If you have to have an "owner's closet" and can't leave your personal stuff out in the open and need to empty the fridge before you go, it's an investment property.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a home in Bethany. The people claiming it isn’t an easy drive to the DE beaches are they knew who don’t own there - one of the huge benefits of owning is that you can time your travel to non-peak times because there is no check-in day or time. Only once this summer did we hit any traffic delay of more than 15 minutes, but we often head there Friday morning and return Monday night.
Yeah people who claim there is a ton of traffic really don’t go there often. I can’t remember the last time we hit any traffic of significance (more than a 15 minute delay) and even then it has been due to an accident.
Maybe true, but it's still a pretty long ride . . . to a mediocre beach.
My biggest issue is the traffic once you are there. If you need to run out for a "quick" errand you can get stuck in a massive traffic jam.
Depends on location, time of year and day of week. But tourist season can be tough on Coastal Highway.
Yeah, we stop for groceries on the way in, then don’t use the car again until we leave.
Anonymous wrote:We own a cottage on the Vineyard, Inkwell and we go twice in the summer and once in the fall for Thanksgiving. It was my Grandmother's cottage and I assumed her home as was in her will. To honor her, we have family come up in the fall. I sometimes let me cousins use it as we like to vacation elsewhere most of the summer and I am just not that into the house and location. I want to buy a river home ini Maryland or W. Virginia. I want a shallow, tubing and swimming type of river to visit most warm weekends so I can do what I love most.[/quote]
This is what i want. Is the Youghigheny River any good?
Anonymous wrote:We have a place in Sea Pines in Hilton Head. It’s not a bad drive, but there’s also a little airport right on the island.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the pp. can’t it br both? All homes purchased are considered an investment aren’t they? We go one weekend a month approx year round, few days at Thanksgiving and Christmas. And yes block out a week in August. It’s both.Anonymous wrote:Ok, let's make one thing clear: if you rent it out, it's not a "vacation house." It's an investment. If you "have a condo in Rehoboth" and "block out a week" for yourself, it's an investment.
Got it?
Nope. It's an investment property that you make personal use of on occasion. We've been there, and done that. If you have to have an "owner's closet" and can't leave your personal stuff out in the open and need to empty the fridge before you go, it's an investment property.
We have an "investment property" beach house then. Spent 3 glorious weeks down there this summer. Also made $90k in rental revenue for the other 10 weeks. That paid for all expenses of ownership for the year plus a new roof plus a new boat for the kids to use at the beach. Love those investment properties that we can make personal use of.