Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:bethesda mortgage: 4700/month
me: 125,000
hub: 160,000
one dear boy
painful.
I'm the $4,800/month from above. so glad to see we have some company. Our incomes are pretty close. Way I look at it, it will be painful for a few years, but sooner or later inflation will kick in and/or our incomes will rise.
Wow, both of your households are big risk takers. We have an HHI of almost $400,000 and our mortgage payment is only $2,800 (though we pay extra). Even at our income level, there's no way I'd feel comfortable spending almost $5K a month on just PITI. I must be very risk averse.
We too have a higher income and lower mortgage, due to the fact that we were lucky and purchased a home pre-bubble, but I don't see these posters are risky at all. If they bring home 65% of their income, they still are bringing home $15,430/mo, back out mortgage and they have over 10K left. Who can't live on 10K/mo??? This is WAYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY better off that the majority of Americans.
Poster-I'd hate to see what you think of the general populace, considering the average Dual HHI is 67k and the average mortgage is $1,400/mo. The average american family only has around $2,700 left over after they pay their mortgage. You think having 10K left over is risky?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:bethesda mortgage: 4700/month
me: 125,000
hub: 160,000
one dear boy
painful.
I'm the $4,800/month from above. so glad to see we have some company. Our incomes are pretty close. Way I look at it, it will be painful for a few years, but sooner or later inflation will kick in and/or our incomes will rise.
Wow, both of your households are big risk takers. We have an HHI of almost $400,000 and our mortgage payment is only $2,800 (though we pay extra). Even at our income level, there's no way I'd feel comfortable spending almost $5K a month on just PITI. I must be very risk averse.
We too have a higher income and lower mortgage, due to the fact that we were lucky and purchased a home pre-bubble, but I don't see these posters are risky at all. If they bring home 65% of their income, they still are bringing home $15,430/mo, back out mortgage and they have over 10K left. Who can't live on 10K/mo??? This is WAYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY better off that the majority of Americans.
Poster-I'd hate to see what you think of the general populace, considering the average Dual HHI is 67k and the average mortgage is $1,400/mo. The average american family only has around $2,700 left over after they pay their mortgage. You think having 10K left over is risky?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:bethesda mortgage: 4700/month
me: 125,000
hub: 160,000
one dear boy
painful.
I'm the $4,800/month from above. so glad to see we have some company. Our incomes are pretty close. Way I look at it, it will be painful for a few years, but sooner or later inflation will kick in and/or our incomes will rise.
Wow, both of your households are big risk takers. We have an HHI of almost $400,000 and our mortgage payment is only $2,800 (though we pay extra). Even at our income level, there's no way I'd feel comfortable spending almost $5K a month on just PITI. I must be very risk averse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HHI ~110k. both of us work, one child in private school, one on the way, own a small townhouse (w/o parents help) in an undesirable county that was bought during the boom and is underwater. i would feel a lot better financially and with life in general if it wasn't for the damn house.
bro, time to mail the mortgage company the keys and bail....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:bethesda mortgage: 4700/month
me: 125,000
hub: 160,000
one dear boy
painful.
I'm the $4,800/month from above. so glad to see we have some company. Our incomes are pretty close. Way I look at it, it will be painful for a few years, but sooner or later inflation will kick in and/or our incomes will rise.
Anonymous wrote:Yes - please tell us what you're doing and what I'm doing wrong?
At 34, I thought I was doing well making 107K as a government contractor.
This post is telling me otherwise.
DH is 33, making 90K as a Director of Client Services (marketing).
Anonymous wrote:This is totally pretentious, but it is anonymous, so what's the harm.
Me: $575K
Spouse: $75K
Rental Income (net of expenses and mortgages) $50K
Total $700K (we are 33 and 34)