Originally posted by: FoBoT
people want more than they can afford
Originally posted by: maddogchen
HA! try affording a house in California on 65k a year.
Originally posted by: LS20
DUAL INCOME
a school teacher and a police officer wants to get a house. 40k+50k = 90k. bank approves 3x of income good for 270k house. (how they come up with downpayment and mortgage payments is another matter)
your friend cant afford a house because he has car loan. people give up certain liberties to buy a house.
Originally posted by: LS20
DUAL INCOME
a school teacher and a police officer wants to get a house. 40k+50k = 90k. bank approves 3x of income good for 270k house. (how they come up with downpayment and mortgage payments is another matter)
your friend cant afford a house because he has car loan. people give up certain liberties to buy a house.
Originally posted by: Vic
Never ever ever use the 3x income method. It doesn't take into account fluctuating interest rates.
Originally posted by: BurnItDwn
Originally posted by: Vic
Never ever ever use the 3x income method. It doesn't take into account fluctuating interest rates.
Crap!
That's the method I used back when I bought my townhome ...
Of course now I make more money then back then, so I'm ready for the interest rate to go up, and go up it will (in October) ....
It was a response to "Some of the people that we hang out with do not make $65k/yr, but somehow, they were able to buy a decent house in a nice neighborhood."Originally posted by: Vic
Never ever ever use the 3x income method. It doesn't take into account fluctuating interest rates.
absolutely. but a new grad with a 499$ bmw lease is going to have difficulties buying a house.Originally posted by: UDT89
i have a car loan, I pay $260/month. it doesnt kill you. ive bought cars outright before, and ended up suffering in repairs. warranties FTW
Originally posted by: spidey07
Out of curiosity what car does he drive?
Did he run out and blow all his money on a car payment? I'm guessing he's just blowing his money needlessly. If a house is a goal then he should start looking to save 1-2K per month for that goal.
Originally posted by: dullard
So, his take home pay should be around $3,500/month. Even if he didn't scrimp much at all, he should be good at $2,000/month for rent, food, utilities, entertainment, etc.Originally posted by: Qacer
Single and fresh out of college by a couple months.
Thus he has $1,500/month extra. In 20 months, he'd have his $30k downpayment. That is less than 2 years of saving. And you don't even need a downpayment to get a house. People used to save for a decade or more to afford a decent house. Waiting 20 months won't be a problem at all.
Originally posted by: Vic
Well, it (as you noted) didn't hurt you because the low interest rates in recent years make it so people can buy well above 3x income. And with rates still being relatively low, you should look into refinancing that ARM into a fixed before it goes up. Best bet is to shop for low cost/"zero points" fixed rates and see if you can get one at or below the rate your existing loan is going to adjust to.
Originally posted by: funboy42
I have said it before and will say it again, need to move down here by me. Jobs, low taxes, and cheap homes.
Just look at what $24.9K will buy you, and no thats not a down payment, its full price.
Originally posted by: Vic
$900 car and student loan payments? How about paying off your debt first? Then you buy the house. Plus, you pretty much never have to put money down to purchase a primary residence conventional mortgage unless you have damaged credit/unverifiable income/lots of debt/etc.
BTW, Ginnie Mae appears to be cutting off the ratios pretty short there as well, at like 37% for the governments and 43% for the conventional (actual allowable ratios are 43% and 50% respectively), and they seem to be overestimating the "other monthly housing costs" section but I suppose that varies by area.
At $65k/yr. with little or no debt and excellent credit, you should be able to EASILY walk into a $250k home with little or nothing down and an affordable fully amortized fixed rate PITI payment of about $1900/mo conventional (which makes for a 35% DTI). Hell, you could do $300k for $2300/mo. (for a 42% debt ratio). That's all day everyday.