Buying A House: C or D?

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what is the difference of median and average (i presume by average we mean.. mean?) in london/sydney? interested to know. I imaging mean being slightly higher, due to existence of some ultra expensive properties, but not by much.

^ 諷刺 (ken c), Monday, 27 July 2015 14:27 (ten years ago)

(i mean difference as in the numerical difference, not their difference in definition)

^ 諷刺 (ken c), Monday, 27 July 2015 14:29 (ten years ago)

wtf at the house pplains posted - is it haunted or something?

bizarro gazzara, Monday, 27 July 2015 15:01 (ten years ago)

Foreclosed, but that still doesn't really answer the question.

pplains, Monday, 27 July 2015 15:40 (ten years ago)

looks old, maybe the foundation is garbage

Upright Mammal (mh), Thursday, 30 July 2015 21:41 (ten years ago)

look at the price on this house in town here. so beautiful. wish i could afford it. i'd move across town.

http://www.cohnandcompany.com/properties/1028

scott seward, Thursday, 30 July 2015 21:53 (ten years ago)

many good sitting rooms in that house. I need to move somewhere green and (sometimes) cold.

oh, i am a lonlely poster. i live in a box of posts. (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 31 July 2015 00:31 (ten years ago)

what is happening here that makes this $800k?

http://www.zillow.com/homedetails/2072-Cedar-Loop-Jackson-WY-83001/2101596825_zpid/

marcos, Sunday, 9 August 2015 02:53 (ten years ago)

Jackson, Wyoming is a millionaire's playground sort of place, like Aspen, Colorado or Sun Valley, Idaho.

Aimless, Sunday, 9 August 2015 03:43 (ten years ago)

"How much can you afford" calculators are absolutely batshit insane, like 3.75X my yearly income w/ tiny down payments crazy once all my credit card debt is paid off. I can't believe there would be mortgage lenders dumb enough to let me do that.

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Tuesday, 11 August 2015 23:24 (ten years ago)

http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/3205-Willing-Ave_Fort-Worth_TX_76110_M80465-05199?row=1

Not usually a fan of stone but I dig this house if I ripped up the carpet and refinished the wood floors that must be underneath (which is when I discover that they're all destroyed).

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Tuesday, 11 August 2015 23:26 (ten years ago)

If there are no wood floors under the carpet, you can get some vinyl/laminate and do them for reasonably cheap (flooring options are basically limitless now). Aside from the carpet, though, I see nothing at all wrong with this house. I think it's my favorite one you've posted here.

A lender will (pre)approve you for a crazy amount—one there's no way you could logically afford to take on—but they'll also help you out with what you can really afford and work in concert with your agent when it comes time to make an offer. Calculators, I found, are a decent guideline, but you don't really comprehend all the various things that go into an offer/a mortgage payment/homeowners insurance/property tax until you start signing a bunch of paperwork. Then it all makes sense and you feel way more relieved.

Johnny Fever, Tuesday, 11 August 2015 23:36 (ten years ago)

If you think it's bad now, you should have seen it seven years ago! xxp

Upright Mammal (mh), Tuesday, 11 August 2015 23:51 (ten years ago)

I got preapproved for twice what I was even asking for, but the preapproval letter they provided me/my agent was only for the amount I had asked for. When I asked why it was no higher than that, she told me "oh, dear, you were actually approved for XXXXXX, but there's no reason to go broadcasting that all over the place when all the seller really needs to see is YYYYYY." lol

Johnny Fever, Tuesday, 11 August 2015 23:54 (ten years ago)

Waiting to hear from my brother if he wants to sell his old house - paid $75k at the height of the boom @ 7% (owner finance), owes $60k, needs one pier raised and stabilized and the AC is on its way out. It's a Craftsman-style bungalow, so if he'll sell it to me for what he owes I'd go for it and spend the next two years redoing it top to bottom - needs storm windows or new windows for efficiency, new siding, probably needs some electrical work, I'd foam insulate below the subfloor and behind the new siding.

The biggest downside is only being one bathroom - if I redo the bathroom I'd have to shower outside or something for a couple of weeks.

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Wednesday, 12 August 2015 00:38 (ten years ago)

If you could get it for what he owes, it sounds cool. The problem you'd run into is needing to take out a home improvement second mortgage when you don't really have any equity yet. You could look at an FHA 203(k) loan instead of just a traditional loan, but that would mean all the repairs you tell them you need to make have to be made within 12 months and they put you on a schedule and disperse money a little at a time when you're ready to initiate each project.

Johnny Fever, Wednesday, 12 August 2015 00:43 (ten years ago)

http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/program_offices/housing/sfh/203k

Johnny Fever, Wednesday, 12 August 2015 00:45 (ten years ago)

Also, you have to carry mortgage insurance on an FHA loan forever now (it used to be only until you had a certain percentage of your principal paid down).

Johnny Fever, Wednesday, 12 August 2015 00:50 (ten years ago)

you can refi once you hit a certain point and still get away from PMI, though

Upright Mammal (mh), Wednesday, 12 August 2015 01:03 (ten years ago)

major homeowner skills attained as I successfully completed an upgrade of my gas plumbing this past weekend. Let me tell you that was some scary shit.

a silly gif of awkward larping (Sparkle Motion), Wednesday, 12 August 2015 05:03 (ten years ago)

did you do it yourself? I have put in gas lines, but only on other people's houses as part of a job. not to be taken lightly.

sleeve, Wednesday, 12 August 2015 06:03 (ten years ago)

dish soap works great as a leak detector, just coat the junctions with it and watch for bubbles.

sleeve, Wednesday, 12 August 2015 06:03 (ten years ago)

Yeah I did it myself. It's all to relocate supply lines so I can have a stackable washer/dryer. The previous owners had a maze of water & gas pipes protruding into the (very small) laundry room. Now that I've redone everything it's neatly hidden inside the walls. But what it meant was completely redoing the water (which was some very rusty galvanized, now copper) and adding new gas. After I ran the new gas lines, I did a sealed pressure test, then cut into the old, joined them together, and did a soap bubble test over the whole thing. No leaks, but I haven't slept especially well since I completed it.

If I could afford it even a little I would have hired a plumber, because it certainly was not fun.

a silly gif of awkward larping (Sparkle Motion), Wednesday, 12 August 2015 16:08 (ten years ago)

one month passes...

congratulations sv btw

noɪˈɣiːələx (nakhchivan), Saturday, 26 September 2015 10:29 (ten years ago)

Thanks!

Still going through the process as the vendor's solicitor has dropped off the map but hope to have it wrapped up in a few weeks.

I wear my Redditor loathing with pride (ShariVari), Saturday, 26 September 2015 10:45 (ten years ago)

three months pass...

http://www.zillow.com/homedetails/3137-Major-St-Fort-Worth-TX-76112/29011927_zpid/

Even if I took out a zero down mortgage, this would be $125 less than my rent. The problem is that it's close-but-not-close to everything in my life.

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Sunday, 24 January 2016 18:05 (ten years ago)

How "not close" is it? Because it looks like they did a really good/tasteful job updating it. I see a ton of potential with that yard, too.

Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Sunday, 24 January 2016 19:35 (ten years ago)

It is true, though, that your life will change when you move even a little bit "out of the way." The house I bought is about 7 miles south of Atlanta proper. It would be a quick drive into the city for leisure purposes, but the only reason I ever go through there is to get to and from work (I hardly ever went when I was out of work last year and the same will probably be true when I begin telecommuting soon). Seven miles is nothing, but in some ways it's quite a gulf.

Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Sunday, 24 January 2016 19:40 (ten years ago)

Close as in 15-20 to grocery stores/hipster area of FW, etc., 20 minutes to either of my stores, but absolutely nothing inside that 15-20 minute radius and nothing in waking distance.

If it were located 15 minutes west it would be a $250k house.

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Sunday, 24 January 2016 19:42 (ten years ago)

welp
http://listings.realtracs.com/Reports/EmailPublicReports.aspx?EmailID=72497034&reportid=3

ulysses, Sunday, 24 January 2016 19:50 (ten years ago)

absolutely nothing inside that 15-20 minute radius and nothing in waking distance

Whew, that's rough. I at least have a couple neighborhood-sized grocery stores within walking distance of my house, and a little "downtown" area with a couple restaurants and a bar, but better grocery/shopping/etc is all a 15-20 minute drive away so I feel you on that. What I've ended up doing is getting my big grocery trips done on the way home from work (since there's a lot of shopping by my office). And tbh, I've always been kind of a homebody, so not being around the vibrant part of the city doesn't really affect my day to day life that much. It's just a little more effort when actually DO decide I want to get back out in the world.

Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Sunday, 24 January 2016 19:52 (ten years ago)

ulysses! I used to live not too far from there when I lived in Nashville! I was in some apartments on Bell Road, but I had to drive through that area every day because my job was in Mt. Juliet. iirc that area isn't bad at all.

Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Sunday, 24 January 2016 19:56 (ten years ago)

Yeah, I've been looking for a place out there for almost a full year as an investment. I was brought up in that part of the state and my agent is a long time friend. I've got the 20% in a bank doing basically nothing and my credit's good so it seems the smart way to go. Nashville rents are such that the monthly return on that should be 14% a year and I plan to try to pay down the principal with that once I've set aside some cash for unforeseen repairs. Given the way the market is, I don't think an increase on sales prices in that area between 10% to 20% in five years is unreasonable. The hope is to keep it occupied by a family for the next half decade plus, then cash out the equity to the tune of 60k and maybe have enough money to hopefully buy a place _I_ can live in... there's no way i could begin to afford even a 1 bedroom apartment in my neighborhood as it stands right now. Or maybe a great wave will wash us all away before. it is a mystery.

ulysses, Sunday, 24 January 2016 20:04 (ten years ago)

7 miles in ATL can be a bitch. what area are you in Dr. Fever? i'm probably moving there from nashville this summer and have been scoping neighborhoods.

rmde bob (will), Sunday, 24 January 2016 20:05 (ten years ago)

I'm right where East Point and College Park meet, not too far north of the airport. If you want to live in this area of the city, just do some research and driving around. Some neighborhoods aren't so great, but some are perfectly fine and it's still the cheapest quadrant of the city to buy in.

Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Sunday, 24 January 2016 20:12 (ten years ago)

gothca. trying to stay somewhat within walking distance to my girlfriend's place (south-midtown/ Old Fourth Ward area) and not having a whole lot of luck, certainly not in my preferred price range.

rmde bob (will), Sunday, 24 January 2016 20:23 (ten years ago)

That's where I lived when I first moved to Atlanta in 2011 and I don't think there's a single rental in that area left that I could afford now (especially since my new job pays less than the one I used to have). Good luck!

Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Sunday, 24 January 2016 20:35 (ten years ago)

fork the fledgling land baron :/

bamcquern, Sunday, 24 January 2016 20:52 (ten years ago)

I gotta plan for something dawg, might as well be the future

ulysses, Sunday, 24 January 2016 21:59 (ten years ago)

Flashback in Chicago. I would have thought places this size (irrespective of decor) would go for more than this, or is this just a come-on, bidding war starting price?

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3418264/Chicago-condo-untouched-1970s-hits-market-just-158-000.html

nickn, Wednesday, 27 January 2016 06:29 (ten years ago)

can someone explain how picture 6 is a reflection in that mirror

kinder, Wednesday, 27 January 2016 11:53 (ten years ago)

oh wait i finally got it

kinder, Wednesday, 27 January 2016 12:00 (ten years ago)

I would quite happily pay extra for the decor / furnishing. It's wonderful.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Wednesday, 27 January 2016 12:02 (ten years ago)

Would be too far of a commute for me.

Jeff, Wednesday, 27 January 2016 12:53 (ten years ago)

Much like the Moorish house in LA that Joanna Newsom and Andy Samberg bought, I love it but it would drive me batty after living there a while. I'd be duty-bound to keep that living room couch, though.

nickn, Wednesday, 27 January 2016 18:09 (ten years ago)

http://www.ilxor.com/ILX/ThreadSelectedControllerServlet?boardid=77&threadid=478

from the perspective of a gay man, i will post them now (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 3 February 2016 05:10 (ten years ago)

four weeks pass...

i closed on monday. owners left tuesday. new tenants move in tomorrow.
i just bought a house with money i never held in my hands, transferred electronically to people i never met to buy a property i've never walked inside of to rent to other people i never met.
the whole experience is surreal. the place is three times the size of my actual home. i own a two car garage and i don't own a car. i have a huge den and it's painted in the Nashville Predators' colors. i have a deck!

ulysses, Wednesday, 2 March 2016 07:38 (ten years ago)

here's an odd element: as it happens, the combined mortgage plus the entirety of the lease in my current apartment was too high to allow for the loan to go through by about 1.2% over the limit. So in order for me to buy the home, I had to find tenants and rent the space BEFORE I BOUGHT IT. Which we actually did fairly easily, with the cooperation of the previous owners (who were still living there!) and the full awareness and agreement of the tenants that the lease would void if the buy fell through. As it happens it didn't. Nashville rents are insane and there's just nowhere to go apparently; we were able to show the place five times in two days and the third couple took it at market rate on the spot.

ulysses, Wednesday, 2 March 2016 07:44 (ten years ago)

my mortgage (insurance, tax, fees included) is considerably less than half my rent. trump is the republican frontrunner. GOLDEN STATE ALMOST LOST AT HOME.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v07CIhRbmTM

ulysses, Wednesday, 2 March 2016 07:50 (ten years ago)


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