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24 July 2019, 01:16 AM | #151 | |
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"Think about it say you take a mortgage for 25 years the norm and after 25 years you have probably have a house that has doubled in price but add up what you have payed to the bank. Doesn’t look so good now." Actually it does. You didn't subtract what you have put into principal(paying yourself), saved in tax deductions vs. what you would have paid in rent for a similar place. Chances are rent will be much more. Rent over a 25 year period should be more expensive than a mortgage locked in 25 years ago. I keep raising rent on my tenants every year but my mortgages on those properties are locked in and use their money to pay down the loan and turn a profit. I also just passed 5 years in my primary residence. House has been up over 100% ROI vs. the down payment in that time period. I have also gotten the tax deduction and it would cost me $1.5-$2k more per month to rent a similar place. Outside of the headaches of ownership if you plan on being in one location for a long time and depending on location (rent and property appreciation) it could be much better buying. |
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24 July 2019, 02:21 AM | #152 | |
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24 July 2019, 03:05 AM | #153 |
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24 July 2019, 03:45 AM | #154 | |
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24 July 2019, 04:05 AM | #155 |
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Renting has its place.
For a young couple with no kids just starting out it can be a great way to test compatibility, learn what they want, where they want to live and to get their careers started without the pressure of owning. Also in a multi family apartment house the landlord is (presumably) spreading his expenses (taxes, mortgage, water/utilities) among all the tenants.
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24 July 2019, 04:22 AM | #156 | |
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24 July 2019, 04:45 AM | #157 |
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I scratch my head reading this thread.
My house is paid in full. My taxes and insurance are $750 a month. Where on this God given Earth can I rent my home in affluent Boca Raton, FL for under $3,500 to $4,000 per month, minimum? I paid for it early so saved tons on interest. I paid $200,000 in 1996 and it is now worth three times. Please explain to me as if I were a two year old child, how paying rent for the last 23 years would have been better, as some have stated.
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24 July 2019, 05:35 AM | #158 |
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There's no right or wrong answer. Everyone's situation is different and owing vs renting might work for some and not others. Each person has to do their pros and cons for renting vs. owing to see what's better for them.
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24 July 2019, 05:40 AM | #159 | |
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Same thing with paying for a house in cash. Yes its nice to pay in full but if you can make 10%+ on your cash why pay in full when a mortgage rate 3.5-4.5% and you get a tax deduction as well? I don't look at a primary residence as an investment or even consider part of overall net worth. If I did it would be up 2x the S&P for that cash down over the same time period. However its a necessity so the goal would be to provide a roof over your head and minimize cash out of pocket. the best would be to get as close of apples to apples comparison of renting vs. buying (with all tax/ principal deductions and possible appreciation) over a period of time. Buying rental properties can also be good to diversify a portfolio while creating income and tax advantages. |
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24 July 2019, 05:46 AM | #160 | |
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24 July 2019, 05:57 AM | #161 | |
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Annual contributions of $9,000 ($750 a month), over a 20 year period, assuming 6% market appreciation results in another $ 350,000 value before tax. That leaves you with $ 1,350,000 before tax- The way you described, this scenario way out performed your real estate performance; not including alternative accommodation costs. Hypothetical of course and no need to go into specifics, but as another user has posted there is no right or wrong answer. |
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24 July 2019, 05:58 AM | #162 | |
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Again, I never understand why people take their own personal anecdote and think it applies to everyone, in every location under every circumstance. The place we rent in NYC would cost significantly more to own. The closing costs to get in are several hundred thousand. The costs to get out are even more. Property taxes are massive and cannot be deducted anymore. NYC real estate, outside of a handful of exceptions, has been dead money for the past 10 years. That seven figure down payment would have been far better off in the market. Everyone’s situation is different. |
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24 July 2019, 06:33 AM | #163 |
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Rent in my neighborhood IStwice what my mortgage WAS.
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24 July 2019, 06:46 AM | #164 | |
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You can verify that calculation here - https://dqydj.com/sp-500-return-calculator/ The S&P 500 has had an average annual rate of return at 10% since its inception in 1926, so, if you had $200k invested at that compounding rate for any random period of 23 years, one would expect that $200k initial investment to grow to $1.8M. Getting from $200K to $1.3M between 1996 and 2019 is, in fact, lower than one would have expected. After adding property tax and home maintenance costs, you may or may not have come out ahead had you rented. It really depends on things like how many times you had to repair the roof, replace HVAC system, do you pay for gardening/landscaping, do you refresh the house with a coat of new paint every X years etc. Even if you DIY-ed everything yourself, there would have been a time cost in addition to cost of materials.
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24 July 2019, 08:02 AM | #165 | ||
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Which in fact I did. Your math and logic is flawed.
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24 July 2019, 08:12 AM | #166 |
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Your English is flawed
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24 July 2019, 08:14 AM | #167 |
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We are simply presenting an alternative scenario - Your lack of insight on the topic is clear. No need to have hard feelings on a missing million.
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24 July 2019, 08:22 AM | #168 | |
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Thanks for the laugh. My house is paid for. I live in it for $750 a month. I made millions off my investments. I’m retired. I buy expensive watches. I’m an idiot. I get it.
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24 July 2019, 08:23 AM | #169 |
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Now I know you have no answer if your biggest concern is a rushed is v. are.
BTW, English IS my second language.
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24 July 2019, 08:26 AM | #170 |
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24 July 2019, 08:28 AM | #171 | |
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I just asked to have it explained to me as if I were a two year old. You guys paying rent are much wiser than I can ever dream of I guess. Carry on. I’ll bow out. Much more interesting to show my granddaughter baby shark video and sing with her. https://youtu.be/XqZsoesa55w
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24 July 2019, 08:37 AM | #172 |
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Personally I rent. I think most homeowners don't fully get that they are making a highly leveraged (often 5x annual income) investment in a risky asset (one single family home)
When we compare returns to a balanced portfolio, we should also account for the risk being taken. Then there's the countervailing factor of having a landlord v. not having a landlord. To say "owning is dumb" would be an overstatement, but there's an even larger group that looks down on renters. I have a friend whose parents pay 40K monthly to rent an apartment in NYC. They're happy, they like it, and they're not unsophisticated -- his dad is a real estate financier and prefers to park his capital in his company For the average person, they should for sure buy. It builds equity in the home. And if they rented, they most likely would build no other savings. I think this is part of the government's rationale when they push for broad home ownership Some of this depends where you want to live. In a tony suburb, there may be little or no rental stock available. Which means buy or go elsewhere. |
24 July 2019, 09:12 AM | #173 | ||
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Well done, but you could have done better. That's all we're saying
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24 July 2019, 09:28 AM | #174 |
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I rent out 3 apartments but I rent my own apartment, does that make sense?
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24 July 2019, 10:21 AM | #175 |
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24 July 2019, 11:06 AM | #176 | |
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Obviously "ownership/investment" is still in the equation. What's best is not a right or wrong answer. It depends on the person. |
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24 July 2019, 01:51 PM | #177 | |
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As several have noted, the right answer boils down to these factors:
If you are uncertain, or don't plan on staying in an area long; renting makes a lot of sense. If you are in an area where the market & ownership factors make owning more expensive than renting; renting makes a lot of sense. If you live in an area where renting an equivalent house is ~30% more than a mortgage payment; owning is a better deal (assuming you intend to stay, or would keep & then rent out your property if you moved). All the talk of "invest the difference in XX" means nothing if you lack the discipline to actually save & invest that money. Most "regular" people lack the willingness or financial ability to save anything. In that case (and the first 2 points make sense), then this individual is now "forced" to save by owning a home, which is far better than years of thousands dollars pissed away on expensive meals, new phones, cars, etc. and little to no savings for retirement. I think the general demographics of this forum make it easy to forget that the vast majority of people (at least in America) are deep in debt for non-essentials and do not plan for the future at all. I'm sure we all have either friends or relatives that fall into that category. Yes, I am a homeowner and a commercial landlord. However, it makes sense for me, in my market. You have to look at each market individually. |
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24 July 2019, 02:18 PM | #178 |
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Not my words but they do make sense in some circumstances.
Buy what you can rent, rent where you live.
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24 July 2019, 10:00 PM | #179 | |
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25 July 2019, 12:44 AM | #180 | |
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Well said, I agree 100%.
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