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20% down on a house…is it dumb?
Posted on 2/5/22 at 1:58 pm
Posted on 2/5/22 at 1:58 pm
Is it dumb to save 20% or should you just put down 5% and leverage the rest?
I don’t know a single person who has bought a house and put 20% down but I always thought it was a standard move.
I don’t know a single person who has bought a house and put 20% down but I always thought it was a standard move.
Posted on 2/5/22 at 2:02 pm to MisslePig
You avoid pmi with 20% down
Posted on 2/5/22 at 2:04 pm to dandan
quote:
You avoid pmi with 20% down
This... Usually makes sense just to avoid PMI.
Posted on 2/5/22 at 2:14 pm to MisslePig
It’s not dumb, but it’s not automatically smart either.
It’s all about opportunity cost - and that opportunity is different for different people with different risk tolerances and savings habits.
It’s all about opportunity cost - and that opportunity is different for different people with different risk tolerances and savings habits.
Posted on 2/5/22 at 2:24 pm to MisslePig
Well your acquaintances are poor af, think of pmi as a poor person’s tax. You are basically paying points for nothing. Avoid at all costs.
Posted on 2/5/22 at 2:25 pm to MisslePig
I put 5% down. Able to get PMI knocked off a year later due to the housing market.
This post was edited on 2/5/22 at 2:26 pm
Posted on 2/5/22 at 3:38 pm to MisslePig
If you have enough invested in a taxable account, you could borrow against portfolio for down payment. Margin rates w/ IBKR are below 1.4% (variable). That beats selling assets and paying capital gains.
Posted on 2/5/22 at 3:58 pm to MisslePig
Nah bruh smart move.
Psychologically.. you’ll be glad you did when your mortgage balance hasn’t moved much after five years of payments that consist 90-95% of interest payments.
Psychologically.. you’ll be glad you did when your mortgage balance hasn’t moved much after five years of payments that consist 90-95% of interest payments.
Posted on 2/5/22 at 4:42 pm to MisslePig
I'll have 10-12% for my primary residence when I pull the trigger next year. Would like to get to 20%, but time won't be in my favor and PMI will be a drop in the bucket all things considered.
Posted on 2/5/22 at 4:54 pm to dandan
quote:
You avoid pmi with 20% down
If you have great credit and debt to income ratio pmi is negligible. I think it was $50 a month on my last mortgage when I put 10% down. With these low rates there is no reason to put 20% down unless your credit is shite.
This post was edited on 2/7/22 at 9:05 am
Posted on 2/5/22 at 5:01 pm to MisslePig
Only to avoid pmi.
But the money board has me convinced on opportunity cost. I haven't done the math with pmi + interest vs that though.
But the money board has me convinced on opportunity cost. I haven't done the math with pmi + interest vs that though.
This post was edited on 2/5/22 at 5:02 pm
Posted on 2/5/22 at 5:13 pm to MisslePig
You just have to do the math and figure out what works best for you.
The more you put down the less you'll pay on the life of the loan, but if you've got an investment vehicle that's going to consistently outperform your mortgage rate plus PMI payments it might be worth considering.
If the money's just going to be sitting in a low interest savings account, I'd lean towards putting it into the house.
The more you put down the less you'll pay on the life of the loan, but if you've got an investment vehicle that's going to consistently outperform your mortgage rate plus PMI payments it might be worth considering.
If the money's just going to be sitting in a low interest savings account, I'd lean towards putting it into the house.
Posted on 2/5/22 at 5:29 pm to MisslePig
You don’t need 20% to avoid pmi if you have excellent credit and a good broker.
Posted on 2/5/22 at 8:38 pm to Hou_Lawyer
quote:
You don’t need 20% to avoid pmi if you have excellent credit and a good broker.
Explain that
Posted on 2/5/22 at 9:50 pm to MisslePig
Compared to what? What are you doing with the other 15%
Posted on 2/6/22 at 1:39 am to Rust Cohle
quote:
You don’t need 20% to avoid pmi if you have excellent credit and a good broker.
I am assuming you mean your broker somehow negotiates such a good price that you already have 20% equity at closing. If an idiot sells a home for 20% under value, good for you. It happened to me on my current home, which had no true comps and it is a VA loan, so I don't pay PMI regardless.
Otherwise, the only way you COULD pull this off was if you somehow got an appraiser to give you an appraisal with LTV of less than 80%. But appraisers are scrutinized on all sides and have the world to lose if they run afoul.
Posted on 2/6/22 at 7:08 am to MisslePig
I don’t think it’s dumb but it sure as hell doesn’t feel good. 

Posted on 2/6/22 at 7:10 am to ODP
quote:
Well your acquaintances are poor af, think of pmi as a poor person’s tax. You are basically paying points for nothing. Avoid at all costs.
There are loans available where you can avoid PMI without 20% down. Not that you would know obviously.
Posted on 2/6/22 at 7:30 am to MisslePig
quote:
I don’t know a single person who has bought a house and put 20% down
That's because most people buy way more house than they should and can't afford to.
Posted on 2/6/22 at 8:04 am to MisslePig
You should get quotes on rates for 5%, 10%, 15%, and 20% down. See how it moves, or doesn’t move, the needle on your interest rate. When I bought my house, there was a gulf in interest rate between 5% and 10%, but a relatively small gap between 10% and 20%. Further, at 10%, my PMI was quoted at $35/mo. Giving up opportunity potential as well as a chunk of savings security to barely move the interest rate and then save $35/mo for a few years didn’t seem worth it, so I put 10% down. But your mileage may significantly vary, so you need to do your own legwork.
This post was edited on 2/6/22 at 8:06 am
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