SarahLovesJS
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2008
- Messages
- 5,206
A huge ditto to Rockzilla!Date: 2/5/2009 12:29:16 PM
Author: rockzilla
I would say that, while you do want to take the economy into account, there are bigger personal factors to consider when you''re asking the buy/rent question. My first order questions would be:
1. Do we plan on being in this area the next 5+ years? What reasons could lead us to want to/have to move? Career? Family obligations?
2. Can we easily support a (standard, fixed 30-year) mortgage payment on our salaries? Could we do it on one salary? Do we have a down payment? What about insurance/repairs/property taxes?
3. Is there a possibility that either one of us may not be working at some point in the next 5 or so years? This could be due to having a child, going back to school, or planned/unplanned unemployment. Would we still be able to make the payments in this case?
4. What are our other expenses? (credit card debt? student loan debt?) Can we see a big increase in expenses coming down the pike? (starting own business? need to support a parent or other dependent?)
Once you have those questions answered, then I think you can look at the economy/market. In our case, we will continue to rent because I am (hoping to) go to business school next year, in a location as yet unknown. We also don''t know for sure what area of the country we want to settle in. So I''m out on #1 and #3.
I think a lot of the problems occured when people didn''t honestly answer the personal questions for themselves. Being blinded by the market, with everyone telling them ''renting is throwing your money away!'' ''get in or you''ll be priced out forever!'' ''the market is so hot you''ll have no problem selling/refi for a HUGE profit'' ''you can always rent it out to pay the mortgage!'' they didn''t honestly answer those 4 questions for themselves, and went with what everyone else was doing/telling them to do. Going with the herd = not always a good idea.
Then you ask yourself the economy related questions. These are actually MUCH harder to answer, there are a lot of experts out there who get these wrong everyday:
5. Do we think values are going to continue to go down in our area? Keep in mind that many areas that are ''cheap'' now are ones that may continue to go down in the near future. Areas that are ''protected'' e.g. Beverly Hills may mean you''re not getting that much of a deal.
6. How would we feel if our home value went down by 10%? 20%? 30%? Are we comfortable with this level of risk? Do we plan to stay in this home long term if that''s what it requires for prices to recover?
7. How is our area being affected by forclosures? How many homes for sale on our block/in our neighborhood are foreclosures/short sales? Again, may get a better deal, but do you want to live on a street with multiple empty houses due to people losing their homes?
Hope this helps. I think its important that each couple assess their situation individually, instead of jumping on the bandwagon of ''ohhh houses are so cheap we HAVE to buy now'' or ''prices are going to keep going down there is NO WAY we''re buying anytime soon.'' As with anything else, people who try to time the market usually lose. BUT if you look at your home as a place to live and a major life decision, rather than a short term investment, you should do ok![]()
Lucky girl! A starter home, 2 bed 1 bath, in our area is around 700,000. We need about another year to save the $140K or so we need for the down payment. The plus side is that in that year the prices should drop a bit more.Date: 2/5/2009 3:04:12 PM
Author: elrohwen
We''ll be renting for a few more years. First, we don''t have $80k for a 20% deposit (teeny tiny starter homes are around $400k here ... insane). Even if we did magically get the money, I don''t think it''s a good time to buy in my part of the country. Prices really haven''t dropped much and many experts are saying that they''re going to drop even more before this is over. I would hate to buy a house and be stuck in a mortgage after a few years because it was worth less than what we bought it for. Maybe if we knew we''d be here for the next 5 years at least we''d go for it, but we really can''t make that commitment yet. Oh well ... I would love to have a house with a nice yard.
Rockzilla ITA with everything you have said. Thanks for doing all the workDate: 2/5/2009 12:29:16 PM
Author: rockzilla
I would say that, while you do want to take the economy into account, there are bigger personal factors to consider when you're asking the buy/rent question. My first order questions would be:
1. Do we plan on being in this area the next 5+ years? What reasons could lead us to want to/have to move? Career? Family obligations?
2. Can we easily support a (standard, fixed 30-year) mortgage payment on our salaries? Could we do it on one salary? Do we have a down payment? What about insurance/repairs/property taxes?
3. Is there a possibility that either one of us may not be working at some point in the next 5 or so years? This could be due to having a child, going back to school, or planned/unplanned unemployment. Would we still be able to make the payments in this case?
4. What are our other expenses? (credit card debt? student loan debt?) Can we see a big increase in expenses coming down the pike? (starting own business? need to support a parent or other dependent?)
Once you have those questions answered, then I think you can look at the economy/market. In our case, we will continue to rent because I am (hoping to) go to business school next year, in a location as yet unknown. We also don't know for sure what area of the country we want to settle in. So I'm out on #1 and #3.
I think a lot of the problems occured when people didn't honestly answer the personal questions for themselves. Being blinded by the market, with everyone telling them 'renting is throwing your money away!' 'get in or you'll be priced out forever!' 'the market is so hot you'll have no problem selling/refi for a HUGE profit' 'you can always rent it out to pay the mortgage!' they didn't honestly answer those 4 questions for themselves, and went with what everyone else was doing/telling them to do. Going with the herd = not always a good idea.
Then you ask yourself the economy related questions. These are actually MUCH harder to answer, there are a lot of experts out there who get these wrong everyday:
5. Do we think values are going to continue to go down in our area? Keep in mind that many areas that are 'cheap' now are ones that may continue to go down in the near future. Areas that are 'protected' e.g. Beverly Hills may mean you're not getting that much of a deal.
6. How would we feel if our home value went down by 10%? 20%? 30%? Are we comfortable with this level of risk? Do we plan to stay in this home long term if that's what it requires for prices to recover?
7. How is our area being affected by forclosures? How many homes for sale on our block/in our neighborhood are foreclosures/short sales? Again, may get a better deal, but do you want to live on a street with multiple empty houses due to people losing their homes?
Hope this helps. I think its important that each couple assess their situation individually, instead of jumping on the bandwagon of 'ohhh houses are so cheap we HAVE to buy now' or 'prices are going to keep going down there is NO WAY we're buying anytime soon.' As with anything else, people who try to time the market usually lose. BUT if you look at your home as a place to live and a major life decision, rather than a short term investment, you should do ok![]()