• @Snowclone
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    61 month ago

    Renting could never compare to owning, as Equity is the biggest source of wealth for the middle class in the US. Not owning equity to pass on to your kids is one of the worst mistakes you can make. IF you can afford that sort of thing.

    • @agent_nycto
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      131 month ago

      How have we screwed up as a society, much less species, when shelter is seen as a financial investment rather than what it is, a thing we literally need to survive?

      • @[email protected]
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        130 days ago

        Well, as houses don’t magically appear out of thin air, I guess it has been like this since we started building permanent shelter.

        • @[email protected]
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          630 days ago

          Until relatively recently, it wasn’t that uncommon to just go and find some unused land and build a house on it. No intergenerational wealth required.

          • @jaek
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            430 days ago

            unused land

            Unused by white people?

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      Equity is pointless when your $30,000 roof and $20,000 HVAC break at the same time and you’re taking out a 20 year home equity loan to replace them. (And good luck with the $70,000 windows.)

        • @cheesemoo
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          21 month ago

          I don’t know about that - I had my roof replaced (by insurance thankfully) about a year ago, and it was ~26k. HVAC out of pocket a couple years ago was about 15k. Not fun!

          • @mohammed_alibi
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            130 days ago

            It depends on how big your house is.

            I paid $10k for a 4 ton 15 SEER AC this summer (this depends on location I suppose). I paid $13k for a normal roof replacement last year.

            1600 sqft house.

        • @[email protected]
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          129 days ago

          Not at all, these are (roughly) prices for 2-3 bedroom single-family homes. If curious, check AIs for any reasonably successful region around the country like Raleigh, San Jose, Austin, etc. Prices are about the same. I looked up the cost for a dual system for a larger home (that would have 2x AC, 2x furnace) and that jumped to $30k-40k for HVAC. Water heater install (gas, tank) can run $800-3000 depending on the market.

          Asking others for prices for windows, I think the spread was somewhere between $50k-90k, although it’s been a while since I asked peeps. That’s before actually going after specialty windows.

          Prices have skyrocketed since the pandemic.

          • @potpotato
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            229 days ago

            Those costs might reflect new build estimates, not regular repair or replacement, which is the point of your OG post. Furnace repair is like $300-500 if you can’t DIY and replacement is $3-7k depending on fuel and region.

            • @[email protected]
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              28 days ago

              Furnace repair is stupid in cost if you can’t do it yourself. Replacement you mentioned is half the cost. Double it for AC. Still $14k. Even $7k is an unpleasant surprise. Mid-range equipment you aren’t replacing in 5 years makes the cost go up as well.

              Edit: those numbers are still way low. I’ve seen $10k-12k for just a furnace.

      • @Snowclone
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        124 days ago

        Yes, If you can’t afford it, it can be a totally unrealistic thing.

      • @derfunkatron
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        21 month ago

        Leaving out the last sentence in your quoting does a disservice to what they were pointing out.

        They weren’t saying anyone deserves to be poor. They weren’t saying that real estate being an investment is ideal or how it should be.

        The housing market is historically, currently, and prospectively an investment, and one of the only high-return, low-risk investments available to the middle class. If you can play that game and don’t, then you are making a mistake, especially if you have kids.

      • @Snowclone
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        124 days ago

        So you can’t afford that sort of thing? Well if you can’t afford that sort of thing, I guess you’d never say you could afford that sort of thing.

    • @mohammed_alibi
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      030 days ago

      Raising your kid(s) right is better than passing any monetary wealth on to them. If they grow up knowing that they’re set and will inherit your money/house, they may get lazy and just depend on that wealth. That money will be gone after the 3rd generation.

      • @[email protected]
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        230 days ago

        Kinda shitty that people are downvoting this. Raising your kids right includes giving them the education they need to live and acquire wealth as well, so it’s not like this is wrong.

      • @Snowclone
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        124 days ago

        Your parents zipcode is the best indicator of your success in life. We don’t live in a merit based situation. This isn’t up for debate. Most Americans get most of their wealth as the equity their parents owned that they got from their parents all the way back to the homestead act. My FIL has a nice house. His dad bought it for him with a home equity loan. He bought at least three of his kids homes with home equity loans (no not the one I married) he still owns that home, and his kids do too, and their kids will probably have their parents help them with buying a home. That’s the majorly of net worth of all of these people.