Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even cheap starter homes aren’t cheap. It’s hard to start the ladder without spending too much of your take home pay. For some reason people here think $600-$800 is NBD. It is.
Have you checked the median HHI in the area?
Yes. And I make more. I still think these prices are stupid since they’re for tiny, ugly houses in terrible condition.
And that is exactly the type of house you would have been able to buy 20 years ago making slightly over the median HHI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is SE DC not considered a close in neighborhood?
“close in” evidently means white, even if it is geographically further away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even cheap starter homes aren’t cheap. It’s hard to start the ladder without spending too much of your take home pay. For some reason people here think $600-$800 is NBD. It is.
Have you checked the median HHI in the area?
Yes. And I make more. I still think these prices are stupid since they’re for tiny, ugly houses in terrible condition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even cheap starter homes aren’t cheap. It’s hard to start the ladder without spending too much of your take home pay. For some reason people here think $600-$800 is NBD. It is.
Have you checked the median HHI in the area?
Anonymous wrote:Our starter home 20 years ago was a 1750 sq ft, 2-bedroom SFH.
Anonymous wrote:Is SE DC not considered a close in neighborhood?
Anonymous wrote:My Fairfax County neighborhood of late 1960s, brick front and siding clad 4 and 5 BR houses/one car or no garage are listing at 1.3 million.
Anonymous wrote:Even cheap starter homes aren’t cheap. It’s hard to start the ladder without spending too much of your take home pay. For some reason people here think $600-$800 is NBD. It is.
Anonymous wrote:I'm having a hard time working up a lot of empathy for OP. Her savings rate and hard work is admirable. But most people don't get EXACTLY what they want. There's always some give on something with real estate, even for the uber wealthy. Location, size of house, move-in readiness, size, cuteness factor and so forth.
Look, I'd love to move into the Grace & Frankie beach house tomorrow. It ticks all my boxes about ocean, decor, size, the nice pool and art studio. But even though I work hard, I can't afford a house like that. So I live well in the house I can afford.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:???
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/5906-Roosevelt-St-Bethesda-MD-20817/37178845_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/6204-Long-Meadow-Rd-McLean-VA-22101/51756617_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/12833-Huntsman-Way-Potomac-MD-20854/37098964_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1445-Madison-St-NW-Washington-DC-20011/469181_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/7735-Falstaff-Rd-McLean-VA-22102/51748073_zpid/
That first one is adorable. We recently bought at the 950-ish mark (we are trolls, I know!) and would have totally gone for that first place. Adorbs.
Anonymous wrote:Why do people want bigger and bigger houses as family sizes trend smaller and smaller?