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by jjav
992 days ago
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> You will be able to purchase another hour if and when you need to move. Say you bougt a house for 200K many years ago. Your neighbor bought the slightly larger house next door for 275K back then. Your house is worth 1M now. Can you move? Sure, you can sell your house at a nice profit (and pay taxes on that!!). The neighbors house is worth maybe 1.2M now. So you can't really afford to move. Housing gains on paper are not income and you can't cash in on it unless you move out to a much cheaper area. Otherwise whatever gains you had on paper also apply to the nearby houses, so you can't afford them. |
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Why are you so certain you couldn't you afford them? You were able to purchase a 200K house many years ago. Now you just need another 200K to buy that bigger house — and it's a bigger house! You did it once long ago, you can probably do it again even easier (in addition to everything else, you have a huge downpayment now). And no, you typically don't pay capital gains taxes against your primary residence.
In any case, the point is that you're in a way better place than if you hadn't made that 200K purchase. That's what I mean by "floating on the water" — you have a stake in the market so now as it moves, so does your asset.