what's up with ~1500 sq ft houses?

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Bateluer

Lifer
Jun 23, 2001
27,730
8
0
My house is a little over 1500 sq ft. 3bd, 2ba. From the outside, it looks small because the houses next to it are much larger 2 story houses. But from the inside, its very roomy because of the great room style floor plan. Very large master bedroom too, because the builder rolled one of the potential bedrooms into it.

Its plenty large enough for one person, myself. And my mortgage is only ~600 dollars, with insurance and taxes. Not a bad deal. Previous place was a ~700 sq ft apartment for 835/month.
 

Jumpem

Lifer
Sep 21, 2000
10,757
3
81
People spend way too much of their income on houses. We bought our house for $117k, it was 1.36 times our gross income. Looking to buy a nicer house much closer to work around $160k, it will be about 1.30 times our gross income.

And yes both of my houses will be in the 1500sq.ft. range. I like smaller houses. The selling price is less, taxes are lower, heating and cooling are lower, maintenance and furnishing are lower.
 

bhanson

Golden Member
Jan 16, 2004
1,749
0
76
People spend way too much of their income on houses. We bought our house for $117k, it was 1.36 times our gross income. Looking to buy a nicer house much closer to work around $160k, it will be about 1.30 times our gross income.

And yes both of my houses will be in the 1500sq.ft. range. I like smaller houses. The selling price is less, taxes are lower, heating and cooling are lower, maintenance and furnishing are lower.

:thumbsup:
 
Jul 10, 2007
12,041
3
0
Location: Too afraid to say

Lol.

NJ is actually quite beautiful in 99% of the state. If you ignore the refineries put there by New Yorkers on the edge.

Get the benefits of both Philly and NYC, the beach, small towns, young people, non hicks. Can't ask for much more. I've lived in hillbilly hell. I'll never go back.

areas that are shitholes: newark, camden, paterson, east orange.
that's at least 25% of NJ pop.
 

RocksteadyDotNet

Diamond Member
Jul 29, 2008
3,152
1
0
People spend way too much of their income on houses. We bought our house for $117k, it was 1.36 times our gross income. Looking to buy a nicer house much closer to work around $160k, it will be about 1.30 times our gross income.

And yes both of my houses will be in the 1500sq.ft. range. I like smaller houses. The selling price is less, taxes are lower, heating and cooling are lower, maintenance and furnishing are lower.

What are you supposed to do when a shitty house in a shitty suburb costs $400k?

Not all of us live in bum-fuck-Idaho.
 

rh71

No Lifer
Aug 28, 2001
52,844
1,049
126
You grew up in syosset was it? They have plenty of ranches there that size. Our first house was nearby - a 1327 sq ft ranch with no basement, and 1 bath. Perfectly livable with small kids. We moved and bought a 1500 sqft ranch (yes over $400k) and building that up to 2900 sqft in a couple months.. Better town, settling in long term.

We watch those hgtv shows and there are huge houses in the high $100s... Kinda ridiculous. But it's not in very populated areas. Wouldn't even consider it.
 
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alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
People spend way too much of their income on houses. We bought our house for $117k, it was 1.36 times our gross income. Looking to buy a nicer house much closer to work around $160k, it will be about 1.30 times our gross income.

And yes both of my houses will be in the 1500sq.ft. range. I like smaller houses. The selling price is less, taxes are lower, heating and cooling are lower, maintenance and furnishing are lower.

when did you buy your house?
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
People spend way too much of their income on houses. We bought our house for $117k, it was 1.36 times our gross income. Looking to buy a nicer house much closer to work around $160k, it will be about 1.30 times our gross income.

And yes both of my houses will be in the 1500sq.ft. range. I like smaller houses. The selling price is less, taxes are lower, heating and cooling are lower, maintenance and furnishing are lower.


at the peak of the market your house was only $117k? What's it worth now $35-40k?
 

Jumpem

Lifer
Sep 21, 2000
10,757
3
81
at the peak of the market your house was only $117k? What's it worth now $35-40k?

A realtor said she would list it at $129k. I'll probably list at $120-125k for a quicker sale.

Upstate NY house prices never went way up like other parts of the country, so they haven't gone down either.
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,484
8,345
126

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,484
8,345
126
at the peak of the market your house was only $117k? What's it worth now $35-40k?

In case you haven't figured it out yet...not every place in the country took the kick in the crotch that FL, AZ, NV and CA did during the housing bust. Your property values got their asses kicked. We get that. But not every place in the country sunk with you.

There's an entire middle part of the country that remained fairly steady or took a minimal decline, mostly in the higher end housing. Entry level didn't get too out of hand.
 

Malak

Lifer
Dec 4, 2004
14,696
2
0
from the heating your house thread, i noticed quite a few people listing sq footage of their houses in the 1300-1700 sq ft range.
that seems incredibly small for a house.

i have a 2 bed apartment that is 1200 sq foot. i can't imagine an entire house being only 100 sq foot larger. that's barely an extra bedroom larger than mine.
can y'all with small houses post a pic of the outside?

My 2 bedroom house is less than 800 sq ft.
 
Dec 10, 2005
28,544
13,589
136
You grew up in syosset was it? They have plenty of ranches there that size. Our first house was nearby - a 1327 sq ft ranch with no basement, and 1 bath. Perfectly livable with small kids. We moved and bought a 1500 sqft ranch (yes over $400k) and building that up to 2900 sqft in a couple months.. Better town, settling in long term.

We watch those hgtv shows and there are huge houses in the high $100s... Kinda ridiculous. But it's not in very populated areas. Wouldn't even consider it.

I grew up in Syosset in a ranch. My parents still live in the same house. Was a little tight at times with 2 siblings and only 3 bedrooms, but we made it work. Plus, there is a finished basement which served as a computer room/play room/exercise room. Now that myself and older brother are out of the house and my little brother will be hitting college soon, the ranch is perfect for my parents - not too big, not too small.
---
Personally, I don't see the need to have a ginormous house. More work to take care of it as you get older, more expensive utilities, higher property taxes, more furniture needed to fill space in extra rooms....
 
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alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
In case you haven't figured it out yet...not every place in the country took the kick in the crotch that FL, AZ, NV and CA did during the housing bust. Your property values got their asses kicked. We get that. But not every place in the country sunk with you.

There's an entire middle part of the country that remained fairly steady or took a minimal decline, mostly in the higher end housing. Entry level didn't get too out of hand.

didn't know we were talking cowtowns and banjos.
 

Fritzo

Lifer
Jan 3, 2001
41,920
2,161
126
3 bedroom 1st house is normally 1300-1700 sq ft.

And posting in a stupid thread. And to slow your brag roll my house is 3000 sq feet and mortgage is 1200, likely less than your rent.

I was going to say I thought the average house was around 1500ft? I know my first two houses were.
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
I was going to say I thought the average house was around 1500ft? I know my first two houses were.

This is ATOT. They all make 130k+ and anything less than 3000 sqft is small.

Reality says even at 130K salary you shouldn't be buying a 3000+ sqft house unless you want to be house poor, of which most of america is.