Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Meh. I was earning 90k by myself and bought a fixer upper inside DC. It was possible, though those same houses are closer to 500k+ now.
I'm a fed so my salary doesn't go up exponentially like some of you people. I'm happy living in my NE DC neighborhood and sending kids to charter schools. DC is great and I don't have much of a commute at all. It's just a different lifestyle than suburban Atlanta, of course.
I've always thought though that if living in DC meant living in the suburbs I wouldn't bother. The suburbs look the same everywhere but then involve probably commuting and also doubling or tripling your housing costs, and then you're not near any of the things that make DC awesome (which are mostly inside the city itself).
Me again.
29 is a great age to be in DC and you'd be making more than many (most?) of the people that age here. (Most young professionals in DC are not married by then either and are working at modestly compensated NGO or Capitol Hill type jobs.) Enjoy a couple years if happy hours and brunches with new friends and buy a condo inside the city. DC is fun at that age.
pit2atl wrote:I decided to stay in ATL. Life is wonderful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Meh. I was earning 90k by myself and bought a fixer upper inside DC. It was possible, though those same houses are closer to 500k+ now.
I'm a fed so my salary doesn't go up exponentially like some of you people. I'm happy living in my NE DC neighborhood and sending kids to charter schools. DC is great and I don't have much of a commute at all. It's just a different lifestyle than suburban Atlanta, of course.
I've always thought though that if living in DC meant living in the suburbs I wouldn't bother. The suburbs look the same everywhere but then involve probably commuting and also doubling or tripling your housing costs, and then you're not near any of the things that make DC awesome (which are mostly inside the city itself).
Me again.
29 is a great age to be in DC and you'd be making more than many (most?) of the people that age here. (Most young professionals in DC are not married by then either and are working at modestly compensated NGO or Capitol Hill type jobs.) Enjoy a couple years if happy hours and brunches with new friends and buy a condo inside the city. DC is fun at that age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Meh. I was earning 90k by myself and bought a fixer upper inside DC. It was possible, though those same houses are closer to 500k+ now.
I'm a fed so my salary doesn't go up exponentially like some of you people. I'm happy living in my NE DC neighborhood and sending kids to charter schools. DC is great and I don't have much of a commute at all. It's just a different lifestyle than suburban Atlanta, of course.
I've always thought though that if living in DC meant living in the suburbs I wouldn't bother. The suburbs look the same everywhere but then involve probably commuting and also doubling or tripling your housing costs, and then you're not near any of the things that make DC awesome (which are mostly inside the city itself).
Me again.
29 is a great age to be in DC and you'd be making more than many (most?) of the people that age here. (Most young professionals in DC are not married by then either and are working at modestly compensated NGO or Capitol Hill type jobs.) Enjoy a couple years if happy hours and brunches with new friends and buy a condo inside the city. DC is fun at that age.
Anonymous wrote:Meh. I was earning 90k by myself and bought a fixer upper inside DC. It was possible, though those same houses are closer to 500k+ now.
I'm a fed so my salary doesn't go up exponentially like some of you people. I'm happy living in my NE DC neighborhood and sending kids to charter schools. DC is great and I don't have much of a commute at all. It's just a different lifestyle than suburban Atlanta, of course.
I've always thought though that if living in DC meant living in the suburbs I wouldn't bother. The suburbs look the same everywhere but then involve probably commuting and also doubling or tripling your housing costs, and then you're not near any of the things that make DC awesome (which are mostly inside the city itself).
Anonymous wrote:Based on this alone, "holy crap a house deep in VA is 500k", stay in Atlanta.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
All these previous posters seem to care about is big houses. Is that what brings you happiness? If so, stay in ATL. The big houses are literally all that place has going it. Charlotte is even worse.
My brother bought a highrise condo in Midtown and he loves it. He has all the conveniences of downtown living without paying the crazy high downtown prices that DC or NoVA would command.
Who wants to live in midtown Atlanta? It has an interstate in place of a river.
The same could be said about DC. Who wants to live in a city built on top of swampland? Living choices are subjective.