You are now entering your spicy years. 🌶️

  • @SpaceNoodle
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    7 months ago

    if it’s so terrible, why even do it?

    Edit: no answer, just downvotes.

    • @batmaniam
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      57 months ago

      The answer is qualifying for a mortgage is not as simple as you might think. Even if you do, good luck squaring that with prices that will almost certainly leave you “holding the bag” because none of it is sustainable ore makes sense. Wrap that into the best choice when you might get laid off at any second is not always a mortgage…

      That last point seems like it’s a great point for what rentals but I’ll save you some time: for the vast majority of jobs thats strictly because of people enforcing office mandates unnecessarily because something like 1/3rd of assets in the USA are in commercial realestate.

      My point being: the deck is stacked. There is not an actual housing shortage, there’s just a housing shortage for human beings. An entire generation has gotten boxed out of the most classic way to build wealth.

      • @SpaceNoodle
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        7 months ago

        I’ve got a mortgage, so I know the ins and outs.

        Yes, the deck is stacked against us. My point is that it’s overall a better deal financially to own than to rent.

        • @batmaniam
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          -17 months ago

          I’m not attacking you for something that worked for you, but trying to offer perspective.

          Do you know that medical debt doesn’t show up on your credit score but does show up on a mortgage?

          But more important: imagine you’re a nurse living paycheck to paycheck in a major metro. You’ll never be able to own where you live.

          OK, so move to demoines, we’ll, if they all do that the realestate prices collapse, and it’s in such a situation that the 401ks for people in demoines nose dive… That’s where we’re at.

    • @[email protected]
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      37 months ago

      Sorry, I didn’t have a chance to get back on Lemmy until now. Bit of a now-or-never situation. The housing market is absolutely bonkers where I live (maybe where you live too, from your username). We had both made big leaps in salary recently that put the monthly payment in the barely-doable range, and her parents had some fixed funds available to help with the down payment.

      Both the gift money and our salaries were going to be outpaced by the housing market if we waited, and interest rates were already on the post-COVID rise. I don’t think it was a terrible financial decision in the long run, because at least now we’re building equity and the house value will rise with the market. But until we sell (which we won’t be able to afford to for a long time), those assets aren’t liquid, so our month-to-month finances are a lot tighter than when we were renting. Which makes the repair work from the dipshit former owners hurt a lot more since it’s gonna take a long time to recover from big financial hits.