• @kitnaht
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    311 day ago

    I’ve had people on this very community argue with me that purchasing a condo was exactly the same as owning a house, and it was a great alternative…

    This was literally my counter-argument. Not glad that it happened to these people, but glad to see my viewpoint vindicated so quickly.

    • @bitchkat
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      17 hours ago

      Maybe close if the house is in an HOA. I sold my house a few years ago and bought a condo. It’s definitely not the same as owning a house. It’s not better or worse, it’s just different.

      I’m not sure why their insurance isn’t paying for it.

      • @butwhyishischinabook
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        13 hours ago

        In my state the sublimit on condo assessments is very low, maybe a couple thousand per year

    • @knexcar
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      310 hours ago

      But what if I want to live somewhere dense and walkable, but still want to build equity?

    • @The_v
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      1523 hours ago

      It’s a 7 year old building. Why are they not chasing after the builder to repair it?

    • @_bcron
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      121 day ago

      deleted by creator

      • @SeattleRainOPM
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        17 hours ago

        The difference is is that if you’re not responsible for screw ups that were caused by the HOA anywhere near the degree you are in a condo.

        • @surewhynotlem
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          -210 hours ago

          May I please introduce you to children and spouses? You can still be liable for some other idiot’s screw up.

        • @maryjayjay
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          18 hours ago

          If you bought a property in an hoa, YOU are the hoa. Why do so many people have a hard time with that? YOU are the hoa and the hoa elects a board to represent you. If you aren’t voting and aren’t participating, YOU are the problem

      • @kitnaht
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        1 day ago

        With a house, since its yours, it’s pretty easy to get a home equity loan and deal with that cost over time.

        Can you equity loan a condo?

        • @grue
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          1 day ago

          With a single-family house, you can also choose to DIY (especially since the scale is typically smaller), or make cost/quality trade-offs without having liability to your neighbors or being beholden to their opinions on what to do.

          • @atempuser23
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            31 day ago

            Weird to say but yeah you can do unpermitted and subpar repairs with more ease on a property you are sole owner of. Harder to pull that off in a multi owner unit.

            • @Alexstarfire
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              119 hours ago

              That’s not what they said at all. You can DIY stuff and still get it approved by the city/county.

              • @Cort
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                015 hours ago

                Yes it is. Grue is talking about quality trade-offs. Literally sub-par work

                • @AA5B
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                  13 hours ago

                  I own a single family home with a kitchen that needs work. I can choose laminate countertops to save money, even though that is lower quality than is common to the neighborhood.

                • @nomous
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                  09 hours ago

                  Or cost trade offs, not necessarily sub-par.

                  I can do fantastic siding and tile work personally and would be exceptionally hesitant to pay someone to do it. My FIL has done concrete work for 30 years, why would I pay someone to do it?

        • @_bcron
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          51 day ago

          deleted by creator