How long would it take to buy property out of college?

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Azurik

Platinum Member
Jan 23, 2002
2,206
12
81
That's ridiculous. Remind me never to live in the Bay Area. 900k for a 1/4 acre two-bedroom home?!?

BTW, I hope everyone realizes that most homeowners today can't really afford their homes. A ton of them are doing interest-only mortgages, which IMHO, is worse than renting.

When/if housing temporary crashes, dive in :)
 

Koenigsegg

Banned
Jun 29, 2005
2,267
1
0
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: notfred
I have no idea why in the hell people ever prioritize buying cars for tens of thousands of dollars over becoming self-sufficeint and moving out of thier parents' houses.

Hopefully at my work I'll be travelling a lot, so I'll really only be home half the time.

Plus, free food/laundry and no bills to take care of for a while? What can beat that? Some people value living at home differently than others, to me it's not much of a hassle at all..
 

Koenigsegg

Banned
Jun 29, 2005
2,267
1
0
Originally posted by: Azurik
That's ridiculous. Remind me never to live in the Bay Area. 900k for a 1/4 acre two-bedroom home?!?

BTW, I hope everyone realizes that most homeowners today can't really afford their homes. A ton of them are doing interest-only mortgages, which IMHO, is worse than renting.

When/if housing temporary crashes, dive in :)

Ha, that's the plan. Hopefully by 2008 or so that occurs..
 

robphelan

Diamond Member
Aug 28, 2003
4,084
17
81
ridiculous prices..

we have 1/2 acre, 4 bedroom 2100+ sq ft (living area) house.. paid 169k
 

thedarkwolf

Diamond Member
Oct 13, 1999
9,034
127
106
Bought mine 4 years ago and still not out of college. Houses here are cheap as hell though.
 

Otaking

Diamond Member
Mar 13, 2000
5,219
0
0
I bought mine 2 years ago, and I graduated this past May. However, I did take off school to work 3 years Full time, so I had a little bit of money saved up. :confused:
 

BigJ

Lifer
Nov 18, 2001
21,330
1
81
Originally posted by: LS20
Originally posted by: Landroval


How much was the house?

something like 130k i think... its in houston, so real estate is real cheap. ill check it out during the house warming next month

We're talking about the Bay Area buddy. $130k will get you 100sqft and a cardboard box. It'd be the same as trying to buy a house on Long Island in one of the better neighborhoods. Damn near impossible.
 

mugs

Lifer
Apr 29, 2003
48,920
46
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Originally posted by: Azurik
That's ridiculous. Remind me never to live in the Bay Area. 900k for a 1/4 acre two-bedroom home?!?

BTW, I hope everyone realizes that most homeowners today can't really afford their homes. A ton of them are doing interest-only mortgages, which IMHO, is worse than renting.

When/if housing temporary crashes, dive in :)

If the housing market doesn't crash, it's a heck of a lot better than renting. But of course interest-only loans are most popular in areas where the housing market is supposedly due for a crash. :)
 

rudder

Lifer
Nov 9, 2000
19,441
86
91
Originally posted by: DLeRium
400k Condo? 400k buys us a shack here. The house down the block with 2 bedrooms and 1/4 acre lot just sold for 900k, closer to a million.

50k a year leaves you virtuall 0 disposable income. You're dead.

man where do you live? If I was single earning 50K per year, I could easily have a minimum 20K per year for disposable income. Why people seem to think they should spend every penny they make is beyond me. I spend every penny I make now cause I am feeding 5 mouths, but if I were single..... hmmmm
 

Mark R

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
8,513
16
81
Basically, borrowing more than about 3x your gross income is fairly risky. Many lenders will refuse to loan much above 3.5x. Some will go up to 4 - 4.5x. But good luck going any higher.

What that means, is that if you were earning 50k, had a fantastic credit record, absolutely zero other debt [no car payments, no HP, no credit cards/store cards with balance on them], and wanted to buy a $400 k place - you'd be looking at a minimum cash down payment of $200k.

Any other loans will count against you, and limit the total you will be able to borrow. Then you've got insurance (life assurance, buildings insurance, contents insurance), taxes, other fees, etc. to think about.

With a $200k repayment loan - you'd be looking at $1300 a month of non-negotaible expense. Of course, an interest only loan would be cheaper, but carries the risk of being saddled with a large debt that you cannot pay off at the end of the term - in the worst case scenario, you may be unable to pay off the loan, even if you sell the property.

$1300 should be manageable, but could potentially leave you with a shortfall, if you need to perform maintenance on the building, replace your car, get made redundant, etc. You do need to consider these possiblities and how you would fund them before taking on such a committment.