Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Initial post was about a 29 year old buying a million dollar home. While it can happen, a fed or consultant from one of the firms at that age ain't that person without mommy and daddy shelling out cash.
Plenty of 20-something tech kids and finance kids pulling in six figures a year. Or just a few years of Big Law at $170k a year. Very doable.
170k/year doesn't get you a 1MM house, nor would it yield you enough savings after 6 years of graduating for a 450k down payment as someone noted above. Can it happen with some tech kids who hit a homerun? Sure, but that's not common and especially around here. Los Gatos? Sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Initial post was about a 29 year old buying a million dollar home. While it can happen, a fed or consultant from one of the firms at that age ain't that person without mommy and daddy shelling out cash.
Plenty of 20-something tech kids and finance kids pulling in six figures a year. Or just a few years of Big Law at $170k a year. Very doable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Initial post was about a 29 year old buying a million dollar home. While it can happen, a fed or consultant from one of the firms at that age ain't that person without mommy and daddy shelling out cash.
OP here. Lots of bitter assumptions. I started college at 16, graduated at 20 and started working. I've worked in management consulting for almost 10 years, people. My spouse is an attorney, sheesh...
Anonymous wrote:Initial post was about a 29 year old buying a million dollar home. While it can happen, a fed or consultant from one of the firms at that age ain't that person without mommy and daddy shelling out cash.
Anonymous wrote:Initial post was about a 29 year old buying a million dollar home. While it can happen, a fed or consultant from one of the firms at that age ain't that person without mommy and daddy shelling out cash.
Anonymous wrote:AKA Million Dollar Shitshack.
Only in your world. A million dollars most anywhere else in the country buys a mansion but you all neeeeeeed culture and corruption so you bow down or bend over to achieve the nightmare I mean dream.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me guess OP, you live in Arlington or Mclean?
Oh definitely. Maybe Bethesda. I live around people like this, and the wives sit at home thinking their husbands are fat execs when mommy and daddy gave one or both of them 500K to put towards their first home as a wedding present. Makes me want to vomit.
I was the PP who mentioned Arlington/Mclean.
Neighbor across the street bought a new build and the wife stays at home.
I still remember her mentioning the family home in Maine.
I LOL and said most be nice to have somewhere to runoff to leave the madness.
So common around here and I feel like they truly believe that's how everyone lives. It is AMAZING and then they will look at you straight in the eye, in front of their 1.5MM home, and tell you he is a consultant at Deloitte, etc. Or worse, works for the government.... ugh.
Sorry - I don't understand the issue with this. You think they could only afford that house with family money?
Sounds like they dislike people who work for consulting firms or the federal government. Not sure where they would prefer for one to work and what would be an acceptable career.
I think that point is that those careers can't afford that house. Not without help.
Poppycock. DH and I are in mid-30's and we've ridden the property ladder since we got out of college. We're good savers. We had no help for 3/4 of our degrees and now we have no debt. We were able to put down $450k on a house in N. Arlington. Not quite a $1.5M house, but not too far away. Oh, and we're Feds. Judge away.
Can I judge you for saying "Poppycock"? I thought that only 80+ British ladies said that.![]()
And "mid 30's", define that how you wish (35? 38? Etc) is a far cry from late 20's from a financial stability standpoint. And Feds with nearly a 1M mortgage makes me LOL. Hope you don't have kids....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me guess OP, you live in Arlington or Mclean?
Oh definitely. Maybe Bethesda. I live around people like this, and the wives sit at home thinking their husbands are fat execs when mommy and daddy gave one or both of them 500K to put towards their first home as a wedding present. Makes me want to vomit.
I was the PP who mentioned Arlington/Mclean.
Neighbor across the street bought a new build and the wife stays at home.
I still remember her mentioning the family home in Maine.
I LOL and said most be nice to have somewhere to runoff to leave the madness.
So common around here and I feel like they truly believe that's how everyone lives. It is AMAZING and then they will look at you straight in the eye, in front of their 1.5MM home, and tell you he is a consultant at Deloitte, etc. Or worse, works for the government.... ugh.
Sorry - I don't understand the issue with this. You think they could only afford that house with family money?
Sounds like they dislike people who work for consulting firms or the federal government. Not sure where they would prefer for one to work and what would be an acceptable career.
I think that point is that those careers can't afford that house. Not without help.
Poppycock. DH and I are in mid-30's and we've ridden the property ladder since we got out of college. We're good savers. We had no help for 3/4 of our degrees and now we have no debt. We were able to put down $450k on a house in N. Arlington. Not quite a $1.5M house, but not too far away. Oh, and we're Feds. Judge away.
Can I judge you for saying "Poppycock"? I thought that only 80+ British ladies said that.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me guess OP, you live in Arlington or Mclean?
Oh definitely. Maybe Bethesda. I live around people like this, and the wives sit at home thinking their husbands are fat execs when mommy and daddy gave one or both of them 500K to put towards their first home as a wedding present. Makes me want to vomit.
I was the PP who mentioned Arlington/Mclean.
Neighbor across the street bought a new build and the wife stays at home.
I still remember her mentioning the family home in Maine.
I LOL and said most be nice to have somewhere to runoff to leave the madness.
So common around here and I feel like they truly believe that's how everyone lives. It is AMAZING and then they will look at you straight in the eye, in front of their 1.5MM home, and tell you he is a consultant at Deloitte, etc. Or worse, works for the government.... ugh.
Sorry - I don't understand the issue with this. You think they could only afford that house with family money?
Sounds like they dislike people who work for consulting firms or the federal government. Not sure where they would prefer for one to work and what would be an acceptable career.
I think that point is that those careers can't afford that house. Not without help.
Poppycock. DH and I are in mid-30's and we've ridden the property ladder since we got out of college. We're good savers. We had no help for 3/4 of our degrees and now we have no debt. We were able to put down $450k on a house in N. Arlington. Not quite a $1.5M house, but not too far away. Oh, and we're Feds. Judge away.
Anonymous wrote:A good friend deciding between a job in the DC suburbs and one in Ohio took the one in Ohio for precisely this reason -- he said something almost exactly like "If I'm going to spend a million dollars on a house, it should be practically a mansion." (He spent half of that, on a huuuuuge custom built house in Ohio.)
When we were house hunting a couple years ago (after the market crash!), my low point was driving all the way across town to see a new house on the market for $990K. It was very small (I think they used a funky lens to make it look big in the pictures!), had appliances that were at least 30 years old in the kitchen, had really disgustingly dirty bathrooms, and had a significant mold smell in the "finished" basement. I was absolutely astounded when it sold for close to asking price a couple months later.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me guess OP, you live in Arlington or Mclean?
Oh definitely. Maybe Bethesda. I live around people like this, and the wives sit at home thinking their husbands are fat execs when mommy and daddy gave one or both of them 500K to put towards their first home as a wedding present. Makes me want to vomit.
I was the PP who mentioned Arlington/Mclean.
Neighbor across the street bought a new build and the wife stays at home.
I still remember her mentioning the family home in Maine.
I LOL and said most be nice to have somewhere to runoff to leave the madness.
So common around here and I feel like they truly believe that's how everyone lives. It is AMAZING and then they will look at you straight in the eye, in front of their 1.5MM home, and tell you he is a consultant at Deloitte, etc. Or worse, works for the government.... ugh.
Sorry - I don't understand the issue with this. You think they could only afford that house with family money?
Sounds like they dislike people who work for consulting firms or the federal government. Not sure where they would prefer for one to work and what would be an acceptable career.
I think that point is that those careers can't afford that house. Not without help.
Poppycock. DH and I are in mid-30's and we've ridden the property ladder since we got out of college. We're good savers. We had no help for 3/4 of our degrees and now we have no debt. We were able to put down $450k on a house in N. Arlington. Not quite a $1.5M house, but not too far away. Oh, and we're Feds. Judge away.