Anonymous wrote:Maybe I'm simple minded because I'm not from dc and live in a simple, small town. But what does a $1.5 million home have to offer that a $750,000 home doesn't? It just seems so downright silly to me. You obviously have some concerns if you need to seek out advice on this. So why would you spread yourself thin over what, the difference in moldings? Heated floors in the garage? A gazing pool? What of these material things could possibly justify it?
Anonymous wrote:Maybe I'm simple minded because I'm not from dc and live in a simple, small town. But what does a $1.5 million home have to offer that a $750,000 home doesn't? It just seems so downright silly to me. You obviously have some concerns if you need to seek out advice on this. So why would you spread yourself thin over what, the difference in moldings? Heated floors in the garage? A gazing pool? What of these material things could possibly justify it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our HHI is higher and the thought of buying a $1.5M house makes me sick to my stomach. Why deny yourself healthy savings? Cash is king, you'll never know when you might need a spare $2k or 3k a month. You can buy a great house for $800k. $1.5M houses are for people making double what you are.
This.
Anonymous wrote:Our HHI is higher and the thought of buying a $1.5M house makes me sick to my stomach. Why deny yourself healthy savings? Cash is king, you'll never know when you might need a spare $2k or 3k a month. You can buy a great house for $800k. $1.5M houses are for people making double what you are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we have in income of $375K and have a combined mortgage payment of about $750K on two houses. We max 2 401ks plus save about $80k additional per year.
In terms of expenses we pay about $20K a year in child-related expenses. We don't have many of the bigger expenses that others in our income bracket do (no housecleaning service, no yard guy, one paid-off car, no student loan payments).
But perhaps these figures can help you with your own.
Please posted a detailed budget. I'm fascinated how the numbers add up.
NP here and I could see this. $375K - $36K = $339 gross. Assume 40% goes to taxes so they're left with $203.4K. Subtract out $80K for savings leaves them with $123.4K. PITI on the two houses is probably about $3.6K total or $43.2K per year leaving them with $80.2K - $20K for child-related expenses = $60.2K for everything else or about $5K per month. I could easily live pretty large on $5K per month for everything else.
Poster whose finances you are talking about----this is pretty much it exactly except our total taxes aren't 40% so we pay less there and our total PITI is more like $5K/month or $60K a year. But the rest is accurate... Outside of house and kid stuff we spend about $5K a month...
$5K a month is a very good but not extravagant life in DC... like it's been described on here a million times---we shop at Old Navy, Giant, go to Nats games but sit in the upper deck, eat out at Chipotle, etc. Anyway, that's our financial picture. And we're not saving $80K a year on purpose---it's just what
we end up saving per year after we live our lives and pay our bills. It's not any concerted goal.
Anonymous wrote:Gosh, why are people questioning this decision, we made the same one (except our circumstances were totally different and we had more money) and it worked out fine!Anonymous wrote:Why is everyone giving OP such a hard time? We have a 2M house on a 300K income. We are older though so no day care costs and minimal childcare costs. We were able to put 25% down. No plans to move though. Planning to stay here for a long time. If something crazy unexpected happens, we can always rent it out and move into an apartment. Got to take a few risks in life.