Originally Posted By: Pop_Rivit
Originally Posted By: Jarlaxle
I'm renting for not much more than just the property taxes on my old house. And it is wonderful...no constant work maintaining the place, no yard work all the time, no giant bills for repairs (like a new furnace), no snow shoveling...wow, I didn't realize how much WORK a house was until I stopped doing it.
Pretty much verbatim what people who either can't afford a home, don't have credit good enough for a home, or are too lazy to actually do the work involved in owning a home. At the end of 15 or 20 years, at least you'll have that pile of rent receipts to keep you happy.
Real Estate prices, over the long, long term, barely provide more return than inflation.
If the goal is to accumulate more wealth, it makes sense to rent a small place for cheap and invest the difference in the stock market. After 30 years you'll have much more money with your investments.
Buying a house is NOT an investment. Buying multiple properties and becoming a landlord is, and is also a JOB. Its not free money.
Everyone likes to show how you get rich by owning a home. If you are not disciplined enough to save without a mortgage forcing you to, then it helps.
The insanely priced places we've been looking at here... We found a place that someone bought for $580,000 in 2003; now asking $725k (but overpriced and valued under $700k). That "appreciation" hasn't even kept up with inflation. No wonder whey they overpriced the place - they're trying not to loose money after holding onto it for 13 years!
If that same person had invested their 20% down payment, $116k, in the S&P 500 and made no further investments, after the same 13 years, they would have over $325k.
Which would you choose?
Originally Posted By: Jarlaxle
I'm renting for not much more than just the property taxes on my old house. And it is wonderful...no constant work maintaining the place, no yard work all the time, no giant bills for repairs (like a new furnace), no snow shoveling...wow, I didn't realize how much WORK a house was until I stopped doing it.
Pretty much verbatim what people who either can't afford a home, don't have credit good enough for a home, or are too lazy to actually do the work involved in owning a home. At the end of 15 or 20 years, at least you'll have that pile of rent receipts to keep you happy.
Real Estate prices, over the long, long term, barely provide more return than inflation.
If the goal is to accumulate more wealth, it makes sense to rent a small place for cheap and invest the difference in the stock market. After 30 years you'll have much more money with your investments.
Buying a house is NOT an investment. Buying multiple properties and becoming a landlord is, and is also a JOB. Its not free money.
Everyone likes to show how you get rich by owning a home. If you are not disciplined enough to save without a mortgage forcing you to, then it helps.
The insanely priced places we've been looking at here... We found a place that someone bought for $580,000 in 2003; now asking $725k (but overpriced and valued under $700k). That "appreciation" hasn't even kept up with inflation. No wonder whey they overpriced the place - they're trying not to loose money after holding onto it for 13 years!
If that same person had invested their 20% down payment, $116k, in the S&P 500 and made no further investments, after the same 13 years, they would have over $325k.
Which would you choose?