Anonymous wrote:Here to be the exception to the rule
Got my PhD before age 30, got married with wife that makes more than me, and we bough a 1 million dollar townhouse. It’s doable. But takes lots of planning and some sacrifice in your 20s. Hard otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:I work in software engineering and most of my friends/coworkers in this field bought houses in their mid 20’s (24-27) in the last 5 years. We all made 200-300k each at our jobs and a few were dual income but most were single at the time. A mix of TH’s and lower end SFH’s (400-750k). I realize most young people are not in this position.
Anonymous wrote:Is home ownership now out of reach for people under 30 years old? Especially in expensive states or cities?
WDYT?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not that hard. Step 1- buy a condo instead of renting. Step 2 work your way up to a townhouse or small sfh. I would not live where we do now if we did not buy a condo in our early 20’s. By 30 we has a house with no family money
This is the way.
What are people smoking! I'm 38 and if I had done that would likely have been under water for at least a decade. Very thankful I didn't
Today? Condos in my area are 500-700K. I'm not seeing how that math works either.
Our tiny starter home in 2005 was $600k. We sold it after ten years, made a profit, rolled it into a better house and are now sitting on a lot of equity. I don’t know where you live, but if you’re in an area with healthy home appreciation then a condo at 500k seems like a good starter investment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not that hard. Step 1- buy a condo instead of renting. Step 2 work your way up to a townhouse or small sfh. I would not live where we do now if we did not buy a condo in our early 20’s. By 30 we has a house with no family money
This is the way.
What are people smoking! I'm 38 and if I had done that would likely have been under water for at least a decade. Very thankful I didn't
Today? Condos in my area are 500-700K. I'm not seeing how that math works either.
Our tiny starter home in 2005 was $600k. We sold it after ten years, made a profit, rolled it into a better house and are now sitting on a lot of equity. I don’t know where you live, but if you’re in an area with healthy home appreciation then a condo at 500k seems like a good starter investment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in software engineering and most of my friends/coworkers in this field bought houses in their mid 20’s (24-27) in the last 5 years. We all made 200-300k each at our jobs and a few were dual income but most were single at the time. A mix of TH’s and lower end SFH’s (400-750k). I realize most young people are not in this position.
what city are you in?
I’m a strong believer in RE personally. We bought at 30 and our house is worth 2-3x what we bought.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not that hard. Step 1- buy a condo instead of renting. Step 2 work your way up to a townhouse or small sfh. I would not live where we do now if we did not buy a condo in our early 20’s. By 30 we has a house with no family money
This is the way.
What are people smoking! I'm 38 and if I had done that would likely have been under water for at least a decade. Very thankful I didn't
Today? Condos in my area are 500-700K. I'm not seeing how that math works either.
Anonymous wrote:I am 45 and don’t know many people who purchased their first home before age 30.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in software engineering and most of my friends/coworkers in this field bought houses in their mid 20’s (24-27) in the last 5 years. We all made 200-300k each at our jobs and a few were dual income but most were single at the time. A mix of TH’s and lower end SFH’s (400-750k). I realize most young people are not in this position.
what city are you in?
I’m a strong believer in RE personally. We bought at 30 and our house is worth 2-3x what we bought.
Anonymous wrote:I work in software engineering and most of my friends/coworkers in this field bought houses in their mid 20’s (24-27) in the last 5 years. We all made 200-300k each at our jobs and a few were dual income but most were single at the time. A mix of TH’s and lower end SFH’s (400-750k). I realize most young people are not in this position.
Anonymous wrote:I work in software engineering and most of my friends/coworkers in this field bought houses in their mid 20’s (24-27) in the last 5 years. We all made 200-300k each at our jobs and a few were dual income but most were single at the time. A mix of TH’s and lower end SFH’s (400-750k). I realize most young people are not in this position.