Anonymous wrote:Some friends who own don't understand why I rent but I pay about $5500 per month for a really truly gorgeous place that would cost me at least $8k per month to purchase. I do it because I love renting and see no need to live in something sub-par.
I used to own a house but if I have my way, and I believe I will, I'll never buy again. I plan to rent this place for another year and then move to Rio for about 3 months before I head to Los Angeles. After that who knows. I have no desire to be tied to one place, or think about maintenance. The day before Mother's Day my oven went out in the middle of me making a meal. I called my landlord's property manager and in less than 2 hours the maintenance guy was here fixing the problem.
Obviously some people really like owning. Fine. Keep doing it. I pay a premium for my peace of mind. I invest my money in things other than real estate.
Anonymous wrote:But what happens over time? If you rent somewhere for $2000 and you could buy for $2500 on a fixed rate mortgage, and rents go up by 4% a year! you are no longer investing the "excess" after 6-7 years because there is no more "excess". Your rent is now more than the fixed rate mortgage. Now it's the homeowner who is investing all the extra money they have, that increases every year, as rents rise and a fixed rate mortgage stays the same. In 20 years you're paying $4000+ for that same property while the homeowner is paying $3000 or less even with property tax increases, and is looking forward to having it paid off in ten years, at which point you'd pay probably $6000 while the homeowners pays just property taxes and insurance and has a valuable asset to boot.
Perma-renters always seem to look at a snapshot in time, or at most a 2-3 year horizon. They compare a $2000 rent NOW to a $2500 mortgage NOW and think it's a good idea to rent. In five years that same property will require a mortgage of $3000 while their rent is $2400 so renting will be a good idea THEN. In 15 years the same property will require a mortgage of $4200 while they can rent for $3700, so renting will be a good idea then as well.
Then after 20 years of renting they'll accuse people who have tons of equity in their houses of being "lucky" to have bought before a price run up or two. Uhhhh no.
I'm more than happy to live in a house I love, even if it costs a little more now, knowing that I am cheapening my living costs over time with inflation, while rent increases in urban areas generall run a point above inflation, so renting gets more expensive all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you forever renters worry at all about the future? I can't imagine going into retirement without a paid roof over my head. You think rents are high now - what do you think they will be in a few decades?
Rent is high for my family right now because we need the extra room for kids. By the time we retire, we can downsize. I can't imagine I'll want to maintain and keep up a big house and yard when I'm retired. I'd rather have an apartment (like I have now) and be free to travel and visit my kids.
Plus, renting allows us to throw money at retirement, rather than saving for a down payment. We pay under $3K for a 2bd apartment in boundary for a good school in DC. Our commutes are less than 30min, we can get away with owning only 1 car and only using aftercare through school. We still have student loan debt we're paying off as well. To own in our neighborhood (in our condo complex), we'd have to have at least $50K for a down payment, (that's with impeccable credit, with our credit, we'd need more) and jobs that pay much more than what we have now. Or we'd have to move to a marginal neighborhood or far out suburb, increasing our commute, changing our kid's school and increasing the time he's in daycare, buying another car and generally lowering our quality of life.
Anonymous wrote:Do you forever renters worry at all about the future? I can't imagine going into retirement without a paid roof over my head. You think rents are high now - what do you think they will be in a few decades?
Anonymous wrote:Do you forever renters worry at all about the future? I can't imagine going into retirement without a paid roof over my head. You think rents are high now - what do you think they will be in a few decades?
Anonymous wrote:Do you forever renters worry at all about the future? I can't imagine going into retirement without a paid roof over my head. You think rents are high now - what do you think they will be in a few decades?