Two questions for homeowners
-
- NHL Healthy Scratch
- Posts: 12,249
- Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 11:15 pm
- Location: Under the Skycoaster
Two questions for homeowners
1.) When you made your down payment, did you feel like you pushed your self to the limits to make that down payment? Were you comfortable with the amount that you had left over in savings and such after you made the payment? In terms of total assets, how much did you spend on your down payments?
2.) In terms of paying rent vs paying a mortgage, how much did your monthly mortgage payment differ from your rent payment
2.) In terms of paying rent vs paying a mortgage, how much did your monthly mortgage payment differ from your rent payment
-
- NHL Third Liner
- Posts: 28,922
- Joined: Tue Mar 13, 2007 9:10 am
- Location: Pittsburgh
Re: Two questions for homeowners
If you'd rather hold some cash, i'd ask for the max seller assist, especially if your looking to make sure you get that 20% down.
Second...that will depend solely on what your paying in rent and how expensive a house your buying. I'll say that our entire monthly payment (taxes and mortgage) was roughly the same as i was paying for my share of a two bedroom apt in shadyside.
Second...that will depend solely on what your paying in rent and how expensive a house your buying. I'll say that our entire monthly payment (taxes and mortgage) was roughly the same as i was paying for my share of a two bedroom apt in shadyside.
-
- NHL Healthy Scratch
- Posts: 12,249
- Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 11:15 pm
- Location: Under the Skycoaster
Re: Two questions for homeowners
in this hypothetical scenerio, kenny the kangaroo can afford to make the 20% down payment, without seller assist, and still have about half of what was originally saved up.
also in this hypothetical situation, the mortgage,r/e tax, insurance, etc would be about 200 to 250 more than the current rent payment
kenny the kangaroo does not want to put any undue strain on kenny the kangaroos financial well being
also in this hypothetical situation, the mortgage,r/e tax, insurance, etc would be about 200 to 250 more than the current rent payment
kenny the kangaroo does not want to put any undue strain on kenny the kangaroos financial well being
-
- NHL Second Liner
- Posts: 48,700
- Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 8:06 pm
- Location: governor of Fayettenam
Re: Two questions for homeowners
The way I look at it is that you are saving for ___ reason. Sure I wouldn't want to completely deplete the savings but that's what it's there for. Time to start building that back up.
-
- NHL Second Liner
- Posts: 42,356
- Joined: Fri Feb 24, 2006 12:56 pm
Re: Two questions for homeowners
1) My wife and I were comfortable with both of our downpayments for the two homes we have owned. While it is a lot of money, we made sure the homes we purchased were well within our comfort zone and didn't push the limits. On both homes we made the 20% down payment in order to avoid the additional insurance payment. That 20% probabl reprsented about 15-20% of our total assets. We never dipped below the amount we felt uncomfortable having in our savings.
2) In terms of rent vs mortgage, our first monthly mortgage at the lowest was probably 3 times our monthly rent, and the new home is probably 5 times, although for both homes, we pay probably 7 times more than what we paid for rent to just pay off the house faster.
Do whatever you feel comfortable with.
2) In terms of rent vs mortgage, our first monthly mortgage at the lowest was probably 3 times our monthly rent, and the new home is probably 5 times, although for both homes, we pay probably 7 times more than what we paid for rent to just pay off the house faster.
Do whatever you feel comfortable with.
-
- NHL Second Liner
- Posts: 42,356
- Joined: Fri Feb 24, 2006 12:56 pm
Re: Two questions for homeowners
This is key to being a happy home owner.KennyTheKangaroo wrote:kenny the kangaroo does not want to put any undue strain on kenny the kangaroos financial well being
I know a few people that have extremely nice homes, but have to worry because if they lost their job or something happened, they have absolutely nothing to fall back on. Plus they pretty much live paycheck to paycheck sinking it all into their home.s They can't go on vacation, can't go to sporting events (used to love to go), and are building up some debt because they have to store some on their credit card.
You want to buy what you can afford, while still living the life you want. Sure, there are some adjustments, but if you do it right, you won't notice them after a few months.
-
- NHL Third Liner
- Posts: 39,689
- Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 11:13 am
- Location: Nevin Shapiro A&M
Re: Two questions for homeowners
nan is pretty on-point.
-
- NHL Second Liner
- Posts: 48,700
- Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 8:06 pm
- Location: governor of Fayettenam
Re: Two questions for homeowners
For once.canaan wrote:nan is pretty on-point.
-
- NHL Third Liner
- Posts: 39,689
- Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 11:13 am
- Location: Nevin Shapiro A&M
Re: Two questions for homeowners
yeah, it pained me to type that.
-
- NHL Second Liner
- Posts: 42,356
- Joined: Fri Feb 24, 2006 12:56 pm
Re: Two questions for homeowners
You loved it.canaan wrote:yeah, it pained me to type that.
-
- AHL'er
- Posts: 3,395
- Joined: Sat Jan 28, 2006 9:21 am
Re: Two questions for homeowners
I took a majority of my savings to satisfy the 20% down + initial house improvements (HW floors,...). I had left ~ 4 months worth of (modest) living expenses.
Also, in today's economy, given the extremely low mortgage rates (let alone tax deductibiity of the payments), I would absolutely, positively put down not one penny above the minimum threshold of 20%.
Also, in today's economy, given the extremely low mortgage rates (let alone tax deductibiity of the payments), I would absolutely, positively put down not one penny above the minimum threshold of 20%.
-
- NHL Healthy Scratch
- Posts: 12,249
- Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 11:15 pm
- Location: Under the Skycoaster
Re: Two questions for homeowners
Therein lies the problem, it's all relative. Kenny the kangaroo's parents are the type that paid their mortgage off early, never got into CC debt, and spent very frugally. So when it comes to a big decision like buying a house, it messes with kenny the kangaroos comfort zone. There are probably a lot of people that would be comfortable if they were in a comparable financial situation, but kenny the kangaroo leans on the conservative side. But this is probably a situation where it might be better to take a more agressive approach.newarenanow wrote:Do whatever you feel comfortable with.
-
- NHL Healthy Scratch
- Posts: 12,249
- Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 11:15 pm
- Location: Under the Skycoaster
Re: Two questions for homeowners
thats a great way to look at it, and it would be about 6 months of living expenses for this gentleman. of course, a lot of that money would be tied up in an IRA and retirement fund.Tomas wrote:I took a majority of my savings to satisfy the 20% down + initial house improvements (HW floors,...). I had left ~ 4 months worth of (modest) living expenses.
-
- NHL Second Liner
- Posts: 42,356
- Joined: Fri Feb 24, 2006 12:56 pm
Re: Two questions for homeowners
Financially, I'm very conservative as well. (guess us accountants are like that).KennyTheKangaroo wrote:Therein lies the problem, it's all relative. Kenny the kangaroo's parents are the type that paid their mortgage off early, never got into CC debt, and spent very frugally. So when it comes to a big decision like buying a house, it messes with kenny the kangaroos comfort zone. There are probably a lot of people that would be comfortable if they were in a comparable financial situation, but kenny the kangaroo leans on the conservative side. But this is probably a situation where it might be better to take a more agressive approach.newarenanow wrote:Do whatever you feel comfortable with.
Me and the Mrs probably could have spent more on our home and could financially afford it, but it wouldn't have made me comfortable. I also was trying to look forward as well (ie. knowing we wanted more kids, what daycare cost for those kids, purchasing larger cars to fit the family, higher food bills, etc), and built in a cushion to our monthly pay vs what our mortgage was. We also want to pay our house off in the next 15 years, so we worked that in as well.
I know the comfort level is different for everyone, but just IMO, from the viewpoint you are looking, you are on the right track.
However, anytime I look at savings, I exclude my 401k and IRA as I will only touch those if I only absolutely have to, and it is the very last hope. To me, I just forget I have that money.
-
- NHL Third Liner
- Posts: 25,043
- Joined: Sun Mar 04, 2007 2:03 pm
- Location: Good night, sweet prince...
Re: Two questions for homeowners
My fiancee just asked me to think about buying a house while we're still in grad school as it'll be cheaper than rent. I understand where she's coming from... with what we pay in rent we could easily afford a mortgage on a $150,000 home... BUT we don't have the money saved for a down payment. All the money we are saving is going towards our wedding. We're going to be leaving the area in about 3 years. I don't really understand her want to look for a house, but we're going to look at our options and see what we can come up with.
-
- NHL Second Liner
- Posts: 48,700
- Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 8:06 pm
- Location: governor of Fayettenam
Re: Two questions for homeowners
I feel you there, right now our savings is banked but its all for the wedding. Hopefully we recoup that through gifts, get some student loans paid down, and in 3-5 years have a solid down payment saved up.count2infinity wrote:My fiancee just asked me to think about buying a house while we're still in grad school as it'll be cheaper than rent. I understand where she's coming from... with what we pay in rent we could easily afford a mortgage on a $150,000 home... BUT we don't have the money saved for a down payment. All the money we are saving is going towards our wedding. We're going to be leaving the area in about 3 years. I don't really understand her want to look for a house, but we're going to look at our options and see what we can come up with.
-
- ECHL'er
- Posts: 1,679
- Joined: Fri Oct 22, 2010 9:44 am
- Location: me, 3 years Super League
Re: Two questions for homeowners
that was 4 questions not 2. just sayin'......
-
- NHL Healthy Scratch
- Posts: 12,249
- Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 11:15 pm
- Location: Under the Skycoaster
Re: Two questions for homeowners
Yeah but thats why the nubmers in parenthesis were used. its totally different.shoeshine boy wrote:that was 4 questions not 2. just sayin'......
-
- AHL'er
- Posts: 4,662
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2006 1:25 pm
- Location: Fredericktown, PA
Re: Two questions for homeowners
1) My wife and I did not put a down payment on our house. We did a first time homeowners program (I don't think it is around anymore). We had max seller assist, I actually left the closing with more $ than I walked in with.
2) My mortgage is actually cheaper than the rent that we used to pay.
2) My mortgage is actually cheaper than the rent that we used to pay.
-
- AHL'er
- Posts: 3,395
- Joined: Sat Jan 28, 2006 9:21 am
Re: Two questions for homeowners
I think a lot in that decision should depend on "how secure your job is?" Living with 4 months of savings (incidentally, I am of a mindset that retirement should not be counted as a part of "savings" - it's simply the necessary evil I have to take care of so that I don't starve to death once I turn 70) was a little creepy, but I knew that because my job was quite secure, I'd build up my savings eventually.KennyTheKangaroo wrote:thats a great way to look at it, and it would be about 6 months of living expenses for this gentleman. of course, a lot of that money would be tied up in an IRA and retirement fund.Tomas wrote:I took a majority of my savings to satisfy the 20% down + initial house improvements (HW floors,...). I had left ~ 4 months worth of (modest) living expenses.
If the house it worth it, living with limited options for a while (hopefully not that long) is not a bad price to pay.
-
- NHL Fourth Liner
- Posts: 21,391
- Joined: Sun Jan 29, 2006 11:55 am
- Location: New Kensington, PA
Re: Two questions for homeowners
Ditto here, well we didn't put down no money, but not alot.Loaf31 wrote:1) My wife and I did not put a down payment on our house. We did a first time homeowners program (I don't think it is around anymore). We had max seller assist, I actually left the closing with more $ than I walked in with.
2) My mortgage is actually cheaper than the rent that we used to pay.
Mortgage is also cheaper than what I used to pay in rent. We certainly bought below what we could afford though, as we looked at this first house as a starter house, and something we could pay off in 10 years or so and be able to move up to a bigger house once we have a family.
-
- AHL All-Star
- Posts: 6,754
- Joined: Wed Nov 15, 2006 3:32 pm
- Location: Here and there
Re: Two questions for homeowners
In retrospect, I purchased my home too soon. I made less than a 20% down payment and didn’t have a separate emergency fund saved up in advance. I ended up with more expenses for furniture and ancillary items than I thought I would, and it cost me a couple years’ worth of credit-card interest to pay off. I recommend the following:
1. In addition to at least a 10–20% down payment, you should have a cash emergency fund of three to six months of living expenses before you buy. That does not include money in retirement accounts like IRAs or 401(k)s. I would also have a cushion of at least another couple thousand dollars for things like lawn mowers, appliances, new carpeting, etc. that a new house always seems to need.
2. Your mortgage payment should be no more than around 25% of your household take-home pay, and ideally that should be for a fixed-rate mortgage of 20 years or less.
3. You should be as debt-free as possible before you buy. For example, if you have credit-card balances, then pay those off first. If there are monster student loans out there, you may want to keep renting and pay them off as much as you can. It’s not a good idea to pile debt on top of debt.
1. In addition to at least a 10–20% down payment, you should have a cash emergency fund of three to six months of living expenses before you buy. That does not include money in retirement accounts like IRAs or 401(k)s. I would also have a cushion of at least another couple thousand dollars for things like lawn mowers, appliances, new carpeting, etc. that a new house always seems to need.
2. Your mortgage payment should be no more than around 25% of your household take-home pay, and ideally that should be for a fixed-rate mortgage of 20 years or less.
3. You should be as debt-free as possible before you buy. For example, if you have credit-card balances, then pay those off first. If there are monster student loans out there, you may want to keep renting and pay them off as much as you can. It’s not a good idea to pile debt on top of debt.
-
- NHL Fourth Liner
- Posts: 16,880
- Joined: Tue Jan 31, 2006 7:35 am
- Location: Sitting in front of my computer
Re: Two questions for homeowners
1. I don't think there's any reason to push yourself if you have the 20% already, provided you are comfortable with the monthly cash outflow of the mortgage payment. Especially as Tomas noted with low mortgage rates. If your mortgage rate is between 3.5-5% and you can find an investment that on average would make more than that, why would you tie that money up in your house?KennyTheKangaroo wrote:1.) When you made your down payment, did you feel like you pushed your self to the limits to make that down payment? Were you comfortable with the amount that you had left over in savings and such after you made the payment? In terms of total assets, how much did you spend on your down payments?
2.) In terms of paying rent vs paying a mortgage, how much did your monthly mortgage payment differ from your rent payment
2. It was about $300 more, but everyone will have different circumstances. It was a strain at first, but the mortgage payment will remain relatively static (taxes and insurance may go up) but I assume you are young and your salary will grow at some rate, if only inflation. So it will be more palatable in a few years, in my experience.
-
- NHL Third Liner
- Posts: 39,689
- Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 11:13 am
- Location: Nevin Shapiro A&M
Re: Two questions for homeowners
im gonna disagree with part of this because, in my case for instance, its about long-term equity. renting, especially in the market as is, you can have a comparable mortgage for the cost of renting, depending on the area. i have a couple of years of a mortgage paid off while still maintaining my student loan payments. that money on rent is wasted opportunity.Shyster wrote:3. You should be as debt-free as possible before you buy. For example, if you have credit-card balances, then pay those off first. If there are monster student loans out there, you may want to keep renting and pay them off as much as you can. It’s not a good idea to pile debt on top of debt.
-
- NHL Second Liner
- Posts: 48,700
- Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 8:06 pm
- Location: governor of Fayettenam
Re: Two questions for homeowners
I'm prioritizing student loans over mortgage cause I have more than 60k worth, but once that's under 20 ill consider a mortgage.