Certainly I think buying a $300,000 house on a salary of $63,000 is a stretch. However, this thread has also brought up a number of opinions about the decision to buy that are, I think, really misguided.
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"throwing away money on rent."
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Why dont people say that they are "throwing away money on interest" ?
Well, because home mortgage interest is tax deductible in the US, and rent is not. And because when you are paying interest on a mortgage you are also accruing equity in a property, whereas if you pay rent you are not. So rent and mortgage interest are quite different.
Why do people who argue that a lease is a better way to own a car because you dont have to pay for the upkeep, want to own a house?
Well, most people who own homes probably also own their cars rather than leasing them. But to the extent that some people do lease a car and own a home, the rationale is rather obvious: a car is a depreciating asset while a home is an appreciating asset. If you are going to rent one and own the other, it is much smarter to rent the depreciating asset and own the appreciating asset.
Houses 'break down' too and they are just as expensive. A garbage disposal can cost $300, an AC over $1000!Then there are taxes and insurance, not to mention lawns to mow. (Do you own a lawn mower?)
You can get a home warranty for a coupel hundred dollars a year that will pay for a number of common break downs in the home. In the US these warranties typically cover appliances as well as basic systems like plumbing, heating, and electrical. In my first house, the toilet started leaking and needed to be replaced. My cost: a $50 co-pay to the home warranty company. In my second house, a pipe burst in the basement and the plumber had to come to replace it. My cost: a $50 co-pay to the home warranty company. It's true that once in a while you will get stung with something that costs a few hundred dollars to fix, but when you compare that with the tens of thousands of dollars in equity you are likely to build in only a few years of owning, it's a trivial expense.
and you will be required to have PMI (private mortgage insurance).
I have met a few people who insist that they will never buy a house until they can pay 20% down and avoid PMI. This is mind boggling. PMI is about a hundred bucks a month. Not a trivial expense, to be sure, but these people want to spend years saving and saving, meanwhile missing out on all those years of building equity, just to save themselves this much smaller amount of money. Meanwhile, if you put 5 or 10 percent down, you have to pay the $100 a month for PMI (at least for a few years until you reach 20% equity), but you can take all of the rest of the money that you would have been putting in savings for your 20% deposit and sock it away in your IRA or 403(b) account. You are coming out doubly ahead if you buy with a small down payment. In fact, I would never recommend putting 20% down on a house even if the buyer had the money sitting in a savings account. Use the bank's money to buy your house, and invest your own money in better places--tax sheltered investments such as IRAs. You will come out ahead. Way ahead. You not only get to grow your IRA contributions tax free, and use the bank's money to leverage your investment in your home, but you also get to deduct all the interest you pay the bank from your taxable income. It's amazing to me that people put 20% down on a house.
If your the real estate market is down for a year or two then, horror of horrors, you must...continue living in your house!