Anonymous wrote:I am a millennial in a nice suburb of Cook County Illinois. Our mortgage payment is $750 a month and our property taxes are $1100 a month. We bought at the bottom of the market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a really really high PITI (5400) but we don’t have daycare, student loans, car payments or country club memberships. We don’t belong to expensive gyms or get regular spa treatments. Some people have lower mortgage payments but send their kids to private school, employ a nanny, lease luxury cars, etc. It’s less about comparing and more about your personal budgeting preferences. You spend your money on what is important to you.
Daycare and student loans are not “optional” for many.
Someone forced you to have children?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your interest rate? Our mortgage payments are around $4k on a $650-ish mortgage, but that's because we refinanced to a 15 year in order to get a sub-2% interest rate. Do you have a 15 or 30 year mortgage?
+1
OP's payment seems terribly high for $650k.
Bad credit?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a really really high PITI (5400) but we don’t have daycare, student loans, car payments or country club memberships. We don’t belong to expensive gyms or get regular spa treatments. Some people have lower mortgage payments but send their kids to private school, employ a nanny, lease luxury cars, etc. It’s less about comparing and more about your personal budgeting preferences. You spend your money on what is important to you.
Daycare and student loans are not “optional” for many.
Anonymous wrote:What is your interest rate? Our mortgage payments are around $4k on a $650-ish mortgage, but that's because we refinanced to a 15 year in order to get a sub-2% interest rate. Do you have a 15 or 30 year mortgage?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The recent long thread on mortgage payments made me feel like I live in an alternate universe, what with the vast majority of responses seeming to be $2500ish. Was everyone responding to that thread 50 years old? We’re in our early 30s and have a $650k mortgage on a small old house in Arlington we bought for $850k last year. I share these details because our payment is $4k and we are not getting much for it, so it seems nuts that we pay so much more than everyone. Do people our age have similar payments or does everyone have 50% down payments?
I am old enough to remember paying 12% on a home loan. And that was a good rate. Suck it up folks, things could be worse
Anonymous wrote:We have a really really high PITI (5400) but we don’t have daycare, student loans, car payments or country club memberships. We don’t belong to expensive gyms or get regular spa treatments. Some people have lower mortgage payments but send their kids to private school, employ a nanny, lease luxury cars, etc. It’s less about comparing and more about your personal budgeting preferences. You spend your money on what is important to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who feel "stuck" in DC just rent out your house at a nice profit every month. You have a rock-bottom interest rate that you can keep until the home is paid off.
You can move anywhere else in this country. Being a landlord isn't terrible, as long as you have a couple solid handymen you can call for fixes.
Ugh, no, being a landlord in DC itself is NOT easy. Too much risk for me, nooo thanks.
Anonymous wrote:For those who feel "stuck" in DC just rent out your house at a nice profit every month. You have a rock-bottom interest rate that you can keep until the home is paid off.
You can move anywhere else in this country. Being a landlord isn't terrible, as long as you have a couple solid handymen you can call for fixes.
Anonymous wrote:We have a really really high PITI (5400) but we don’t have daycare, student loans, car payments or country club memberships. We don’t belong to expensive gyms or get regular spa treatments. Some people have lower mortgage payments but send their kids to private school, employ a nanny, lease luxury cars, etc. It’s less about comparing and more about your personal budgeting preferences. You spend your money on what is important to you.