|
|
|
|
|
by mrguyorama
302 days ago
|
|
Your rent will go up 5% a year, every year, compounding to infinity. That pays for a lot of contractor time. Even if you have to take a line of credit against your house above your current loan amount, your equity is based on it's current value, and that's still a static price in the end. That rent increases every single year, percentage based so it compounds, is asinine and literally only serves to make some holding company's line go up infinitely. As long as the US has 30 year fixed rate loans, it will never be better to rent. |
|
Plus, as a renter, I took the option of renting in a cheaper (unattractive) building with no amenities in an otherwise expensive neighborhood in a very expensive city, to be close to work.
If I wanted to buy a condo in the same neighborhood as I live in now, roughly the same layout, I’m looking at a monthly mortgage payment plus condo fees at least 75% more than my _total_ cost to rent where I am now, including utilities.
Is owning a home the financially responsible thing to do, generally? Yes. But owning a home is more money and more work than most people wondering about the decision realize, even if in the end you come out on top when you look at your bottom line.