We are told that home ownership is the American Dream and path to prosperity, but I’m not seeing it.
1). I’ve pretty much accepted the fact that I’m not going to get married or have any kids, and buying a house seems kind of pointless for a single mobile male.
2). Houses are expensive and require hefty down payments, but they don’t put a single dime in your pocket at the end of the day. Yes, you can hypothetically rent out rooms, but that’s mostly chicken **** talk people say to justify buying a house and I’d rather rent what I own, not. Live where I rent. Plus, there’s more to it which can go in another topic.
3). You lose mobility. The only thing holding here is a lease that I can just pay 2 months rent upfront to break. A mortgage is a lot harder to break out of.
4). You have to pay your own maintenance and repairs. Ewww
5). The only houses I could afford would be in some bum **** Egypt beyond the pale banjo area or be some pioneer living some ghetto. Rent wise, I can afford to live downtown in a prime area or an inexpensive cozy suburb.
Great points.
I work in Wealth Management... All studies shows that there is ''no different'' in wealth between Home Owner and Renters.... based on the understanding that Renters will save the extra-money that aint used ''for mortgage and housing''' but 80% of renters don't save.
Buying a Home to make money is a baby-boomer idea... for 2 reasons:
1) They lived the ''reduction of interest rates'' which made their house value go up
2) 80% of baby boomer retirement money is in their home, they have to sell to get access to the cash
In the field of my practice... I see so many young couples buy a house/condo at 45% of their budget (the maximun permitted by Canadian law)... you have to keep in mind Canadian taxes on income can go up to 52%.
So 75% of the people who buy (home owner: condo,duplex,house) use up 95% of their income.... it leaves them with 5% for groceries,fun,urgency,babies etc...
If you buy a condo or house.... it's to start a family (my opinion) with no goal of making money out of it other than having your capital back in X years.
The avantage of home-owning is that it's a forced investment ... The money you pay in mortgage to ''own'' is forced saving. Ask yourself this: If you didn't have a 2000$ monthly mortgage, would you put 2000$ in monthly savings?
If you want to make money in home-ownership:
1) Buy a rental property (marmel75 idea) but accept that you'll have to manage tenants (which can be a pain in the ass)
2) Buy when the market crash (and it will crash like in 2008)
3) Make a strong study of the market (evolution of the district, location, services in the area)
4) Buy underevaluated house and renovate them (like flipping): You buy something that is ''ugly and cheap'' and renovate it to ''nice and cool'', often the renovations + buying low will cost less money than if you bought ''new-fresh construction''
5) Watchout the construction dates, environment standards (some places have environmental contamination or some stones that destroys house fondations)....
Ex: A condo unit in Montreal from 2009-2015 was following ''municipal-government laws'' but in 2016 the construction wasn't ''legal anymore''... so a 6000$ bill per tenants/owner was sent.... All because of a political (corrupted) change.
Ex2: In the 1960's in suburban Montreal, many ''family home'' were built on new clean land.... 10 years later in the 1970's new constructions were outlawed on these fields because they found ''pirith stone''.... The field were full of that mineral that infect houses fondations and make them collapse.
6) Have a mortgage - reimbursement strategy that saves you ''interest''
7) Buy atleast between 1 to 2 times your ''borrowing power'' so that your real-estate is 20-25% of your budget.
8) Avoid dumpsters and ''shady deals'' (an example: bankruptcy sells - the owners went bankrupt for a reason... it could be their house context)
9) Take your time and study the market and skills to renovate a house by yourself (home improvement is costly.... its the service/hiring that cost and not the material)
10) Buy with others (have others invests with a simple capital return commitment - or have roomates/renters)
In short, Housing is like Stock Market... buy at the good time, sell at the good time... hard to predict... except Housing isn't has ''moving'' has stocks (Housing you need a buyer and seller and that takes more time than a 1 day stock transactions)
In short again: Don't expect your house to be a ''living investment for money''.
If you want real estate to be a income source: Rental properties and Knowledge/Passion are key
Market Analysis:
In our Modern Western World, rental cost are has high has mortgage payment now (but with renting you can avoid taxes, maintenance, services, water/electricy).
Rental Cost for budget used to be 26% now it rose to around 50% (so similar to mortage)
Renting is flexible and can save you money in short-midterm wise due to ''avoiding the maintenance cost of a house''
House Taxation goes UP with House Value Raise... in Vancouver some people can't afford their taxes for their paid house because the Taxation is higher than their retirement pensions (Guy bought house at 250 000$.... he has a pension of 45 000$ a year from governement... Guy is debt free and mortgage is done for years.... House is worth now 6 millions CAD $$$$.... Tax per year now is around 100 000$/year.... Guy doesnt want to sell his house cause he wants to die there (like alot of retiree) but the increase in value, made it impossible for him to pay the taxes that he need to get his house)
House price annual returns adjusted for inflation is 6% over 25 years.
Stock market annual returns adjusted for inflation is 7% over 25 years
Stock have lower management cost than house...
House has capital gain exemption (so its alot of tax savings at sell)
House might take time to sell, Investment is more fast.
Buy for yourself.
Personnally: I am gonna rent until family/baby time and business becomes stable. Than first get either a rental property and have renters or buy a family home.
However, I will get a rental property one day for sure... duplex/triplex to allow easier management
Being rich = Having no debt and especially no mortgage