
Can anyone say housing bubble worse than 2008.

If you need to ask that question, you have too much money. Short answer: a barn can be turned into a house, room by room. But rent money paid is rent money gone, it doesn't come back.

Do the math. We could have rente and paid about 2/3 what we pay now for mortgage, taxes, utilities, and general upkeep. We will not live here (and may not live at all) long enough to pay off the 30-year mortgage. The "equity" payments and capital improvements we have put into the house over the last 17 years we'll recoup when we sell, adjusted for inflation, maybe do a little better. But if I had rented, I could have invested all that money plus a third of the recurring monthly costs in securities and ended up rather better off financially. It's all about lifestyle choices. I was not going to raise three kids in a barn we were renovating ourselves one room at a time over the course of however many years, while also working full-time jobs, and I don't know anyone who would. I wanted my family to live in a nice home in a safe town with good schools and all the opportunities of middle class life, and that was worth paying a premium.
What she said, also too as well.BoSoxGal wrote: ↑Mon Nov 10, 2025 9:22 pmI’ve been a renter my whole adult life except for a couple of years in Montana when I ‘owned’ a home that I rented from the bank.
The costs associated with home ‘ownership’ are quite extensive and if one doesn’t yet have substantial equity built up allowing for HELOC and/or doesn’t have substantial savings, it can really suck when you suddenly need a new roof, a new furnace, or $35k to repair the pipes going from your home to the point in the street where your home connects to the city water system.
I know the idea is that someday you’ll have a nice nest egg when you finally pay off the mortgage, but depending on how things pan out, that house might end up going to Medicaid to fund your nursing home placement.
And if something happens in your life that you need to move without a lot of lead time, ‘owning’ a home can be a significant liability.
It’s the American dream but it’s not the end all be all and a lot of people are choosing renting over buying not because they can’t buy but because they don’t want to.
As I said, you have too much money. If you're anti-capitalist, you have a strange way of showing it. The banks really love you; I don't think they like me quite so much. I rented from myself for almost 30 years. Did I make a bundle? Boy, I played that sucker for a fool.Sue U wrote: ↑Mon Nov 10, 2025 9:45 pmWhat she said, also too as well.BoSoxGal wrote: ↑Mon Nov 10, 2025 9:22 pmI’ve been a renter my whole adult life except for a couple of years in Montana when I ‘owned’ a home that I rented from the bank.
The costs associated with home ‘ownership’ are quite extensive and if one doesn’t yet have substantial equity built up allowing for HELOC and/or doesn’t have substantial savings, it can really suck when you suddenly need a new roof, a new furnace, or $35k to repair the pipes going from your home to the point in the street where your home connects to the city water system.
I know the idea is that someday you’ll have a nice nest egg when you finally pay off the mortgage, but depending on how things pan out, that house might end up going to Medicaid to fund your nursing home placement.
And if something happens in your life that you need to move without a lot of lead time, ‘owning’ a home can be a significant liability.
It’s the American dream but it’s not the end all be all and a lot of people are choosing renting over buying not because they can’t buy but because they don’t want to.
Par for the course - a non-substantive response to non-existent remarks.
You seem to be proud of your house since you felt the need to let us know that you did most of the building and put one over on the gubmint.liberty wrote: ↑Mon Nov 10, 2025 11:17 pm.......A house is a box you live in, strong, waterproof, warm. It has modern conveniences; it's not a status symbol. It's not something to be used for keeping up with the Joneses. It doesn't make you a better or worse person. If it boosts your ego, there's something wrong with you, or maybe you're just materialistic.
I love usin' things....