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Your view on this broadly aligns with mine (33-year old, live in Oakland). We bought a cheap (for the area, about 670k) condo just off of BART. It's a pure consumption expense in that I expect to get 1-2% appreciation/year while carrying a manageable debt load. It might go up a bit but that's not the point. We're right off a train line, not paying too much in interest, and building equity. Plus it's a great place to live, lots of young people moving in and we're doing a lot to improve it (lots of deferred maintenance we're working through). Worst-case scenario, we'll rent it our or sell if we move somewhere else; there will always be demand as it's a small, convenient unit in a renter-friendly building, just off of transit. I share your negative view of the Option 1 dystopia. I have absolutely zero interest in living somewhere on the peninsula like Belmont, Atherton, or even most of San Mateo at this point, where you're basically walled off from anyone of lower socioeconomic class who's your age. Not sure "moral ickiness" is the world I'd choose (maybe just bland? do you really want all your neighbors to have the same job as you?) but it does indeed suck. I think people who are banking on tons of appreciation buying today in the SFBA really need a reality check. There's just not much higher these prices can go. The common perception is that everyone in tech makes like $300k, which is so far from reality to be laughable. |