| It’s really a challenge. Do I love my 5br house in Seattle that I pay only $3200 a month for? Yes. Low rates and low prices made that possible for a brief moment in 2020. Will we be here forever? No… I don’t think I want to raise kids in the city. Everything is densifying and that’s not for me. But as rates continue to rise, the financial cost of moving seems increasingly large. We might be stuck here for the entire mortgage term if prices drop below 2020 prices, which is feasible if rates continue to rise for the next few years. Payment a few thousand a month higher, purchase price a few hundred k lower. I could always rent it out. I really do want to preserve this old house and it would need to go the right tenant that takes care of it, likely for a below market rent in exchange. However, given how absolutely unfriendly rental laws are in Seattle and how little choice I’ll really have in a tenant as a result, I’m very averse to that. Maybe I’ll just leave it empty once enough time passes for the payment to be inflated away to a negligible amount. I suspect inventory will stay low for these reasons. People either can’t move, don’t have an incentive to rent out their place, or will rent and not sell to avoid catastrophic losses. |
With tenants in the house, you'll be doing regular maintenance anyways, especially at turnover. You might find some damage once in a while and repair it over the years. This is damage you probably wouldn't find if you lived in there yourself, because you wouldn't have the "turnover" event triggering a deep check. But also, you might avoid the damage in the first place, who knows. Overall though, it's minuscule expense in comparison and it's not like the house will be ruined out of it. A decade or two later you'll want to do work on the house anyways before you move back in.
I think renting out is actually a lot better than you'd think. A good property manager will help you find good tenants and save you a whole lot of headache, save you from getting yourself into iffy legal situations, etc.