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Message

Wanting to jump in the market for a house
Posted on 5/24/11 at 6:59 pm
Posted on 5/24/11 at 6:59 pm
I am just unsure of what I need to do. The housing market for buyers is great at this point, but I am not sure if I am ready to buy a house. The more I think about it the more I am pressuring myself into getting a house instead of renting. Does the money board think this buyers market will continue a few more years so I can wait until I am 100% positive?
Posted on 5/24/11 at 7:05 pm to burgeman
No matter what the market is doing, you shouldn't buy unless you are 100 percent sure
Posted on 5/24/11 at 8:19 pm to LSU1018
Timing a market bottom perfectly isn't likely. You should buy when you're ready.
Posted on 5/24/11 at 8:52 pm to burgeman
quote:
but I am not sure if I am ready to buy a house.
Don't do it unless you are ready, this isn't like marriage.
Posted on 5/24/11 at 8:58 pm to burgeman
It is a buyers market, but I just sold a house to the first person that looked at it......
Do your homework. Keep an eye on prices. Throw out a low price, take your time. Best of luck.
Do your homework. Keep an eye on prices. Throw out a low price, take your time. Best of luck.
Posted on 5/24/11 at 9:31 pm to burgeman
quote:
I am just unsure of what I need to do.
Then rent
ETA: The residential market is not turning around anytime soon. You have plenty of time.
This post was edited on 5/24/11 at 9:32 pm
Posted on 5/24/11 at 10:07 pm to burgeman
quote:
I am just unsure of what I need to do. The housing market for buyers is great at this point, but I am not sure if I am ready to buy a house. The more I think about it the more I am pressuring myself into getting a house instead of renting. Does the money board think this buyers market will continue a few more years so I can wait until I am 100% positive?
What does it look like when compared to renting? If renting is cheaper, maybe keep renting.
The only thing that makes me uneasy is interest rates being so low.
Posted on 5/25/11 at 2:42 am to Tiger JJ
I am currently renting now, but I am tired of just throwing money away. What % of my net income would be reasonable to spend on housing?
Posted on 5/25/11 at 4:02 am to burgeman
quote:
I am currently renting now, but I am tired of just throwing money away. What % of my net income would be reasonable to spend on housing?
Ideally stay around 25% with 30% at the top end.
35% is really pushing limits and should probably be avoided.
Posted on 5/25/11 at 10:14 am to lynxcat
Well that is promising, looks like I am moving more toward buying something in the next year. Does buying a small started home then moving to bigger family home, but renting the starter home make sense?
Posted on 5/25/11 at 10:17 am to burgeman
quote:
I am currently renting now, but I am tired of just throwing money away.
Don't buy a house until you fully understand the folly of this remark.
quote:
What % of my net income would be reasonable to spend on housing?
I like to keep it less than 25%.
Posted on 5/25/11 at 10:24 am to Tiger JJ
Explain to me my folly please, I just see my money going to someone else to help pay for their own home and expenses.
I really am quite naive to the home market so any advice help is appreciated.
I really am quite naive to the home market so any advice help is appreciated.
Posted on 5/25/11 at 10:42 am to burgeman
quote:
Explain to me my folly please, I just see my money going to someone else to help pay for their own home and expenses.
Always remember - everything CAN be worth it...at the right price. If the costs of renting are substantially lower than the costs of ownership, then it's not "throwing your money away". Additionally, you get to have a place to live.
Short numerical example here: LINK
Posted on 5/25/11 at 11:17 am to Tiger JJ
Thanks for the link, kinda puts it into perspective.
What do I need to know before deciding to buy a house?
What do I need to know before deciding to buy a house?
Posted on 5/25/11 at 11:21 am to Tiger JJ
While I don't disagree with your basic premise, I think the numbers are off in that link. I seriously doubt that a house that's renting for $1,000 a month is going to cost $400,000 - that ratio seems way out of whack for what I've seen, at least in NO.
Posted on 5/25/11 at 11:34 am to Cold Cous Cous
quote:
I seriously doubt that a house that's renting for $1,000 a month is going to cost $400,000 - that ratio seems way out of whack for what I've seen, at least in NO.
Seattle got there.
Posted on 5/25/11 at 12:56 pm to burgeman
Save enough to put down 20% of purchase price and avoid private mortgage insurance. Go with a 15 year loan if you can handle the larger monthly payment.
Posted on 5/26/11 at 12:30 am to PlanoPrivateer
I agree with cous cous. That article did not appear to be comparing apples to apples.
To just go out and buy a house for the sake of "not throwing money away" isn't the best mindset to be in. I can show you plenty of people that bought a house and threw away money after the fact because they didn't do their research or due diligence.
Assuming you adhere to the 25-35% rule, you need to see what kind of house that is going to get you. Buying a house in the hood or 20 miles from where you work is probably not the best idea. Unless you like gunshots or sitting in traffic...some people do.
If all those numbers are in check then you need to see if you can even get a loan. If you don't have a credit score of 600+, they won't even talk to you about getting a loan. 20% down is a nice number to shoot for but 10% down with 10% in reserves isn't a bad thing to have as well.
Look for an area of town that you like and try to find a realtor who will show you some numbers about those neighborhoods. Best of luck on that because most only want people who are actively on the market for a house.
Do research on your own and ask questions.
To just go out and buy a house for the sake of "not throwing money away" isn't the best mindset to be in. I can show you plenty of people that bought a house and threw away money after the fact because they didn't do their research or due diligence.
Assuming you adhere to the 25-35% rule, you need to see what kind of house that is going to get you. Buying a house in the hood or 20 miles from where you work is probably not the best idea. Unless you like gunshots or sitting in traffic...some people do.
If all those numbers are in check then you need to see if you can even get a loan. If you don't have a credit score of 600+, they won't even talk to you about getting a loan. 20% down is a nice number to shoot for but 10% down with 10% in reserves isn't a bad thing to have as well.
Look for an area of town that you like and try to find a realtor who will show you some numbers about those neighborhoods. Best of luck on that because most only want people who are actively on the market for a house.
Do research on your own and ask questions.
Posted on 5/26/11 at 6:22 am to Redhorse
I'd love to buy a house but renting here makes so much sense because property taxes are north if 3% here. On a 400k house that's 1k a month in taxes and probably 1.5k in interest.
There are a couple places here that are appreciating so fast though that you can probably make 5% a year in appreciation, so it's tempting.
There are a couple places here that are appreciating so fast though that you can probably make 5% a year in appreciation, so it's tempting.
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