Flexin |
12-15-2009 12:50 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by TIGGER
(Post 305871)
Shit, I paid more for rent 20 years ago! Rent has a way of hovering around a certain amount vs average income.
Anyway, so you want to disregard property taxes all together? $2,500 for 25 years= over $60,000 . I guess that you think that his property tax will never go up, right? What about interest? At 4.5% I have him doubling his investment to about $200,000 in 25 years. Then there's repairs that I'll never have to do. Yard work that I'll never have to do.Etc. Oh and apts do replace your carpet, appliances, etc every so often and the homeowner isn't going to replace these things either, so...
I don't know, this dream where people buy a new house, live in it for over 20 years and sell it for enough to cover all the money they've spent plus some for a down on a new house is a fairytale in most cases.
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You didn't read what I wrote. You don't cover all that you put in. You have cost no matter what. Its the cost of owning. But on the day you sell you have something of value. When you leave a rental you might get your deposit back.
And when a home owners taxes goes up so does the taxes on the rental. So that means that if the cost get too high they have to increase rent so there isn't a huge savings. And you are paying for the carpet and so on. Your paying it in your rent. They don't just decide to give you something because its tuesday. They are maintaining the property to keep the value in the unit (and stay out of court). You might also be paying for that new Benz in the driveway.
I doesn't matter how you look at it. At the end of a morgage a home owner has something worth money. The renter that rented for those 25 years lives in something that is worth something but that is to the owner.
If renting was so great there would be no where to rent because no one would buy. :P
Renting is right for some but not all.
James
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