Let's assume you pay down your mortgage and own your home free and clear. For many people this is a key part of their retirement plan because they figure their monthly expenses will be much lower without the mortgage and this will allow them to live on a far lower income than otherwise.
Ahh, but it doesn't work that way.
Let's take a house of, say, $224K value.
State and local taxes are destined to rise sharply because of the huge deficit in public worker pension and health care plans, if nothing else.
Taxes can be $500 per month this house, in many areas.
Add insurance at $100 per month and you are at $600 per month...but that isn't all.
You have repairs that are conservatively another $500 per month for the average house. This is low. It may be more like $800 - $1000 per month.
You have to periodically update a house meaning spend $12K on a new bathroom (very cheap) and $30K on a new kitchen. There is yard work, new roof periodically, paint, carpet and flooring, window treatments, caulking and repair of plumbing, and much more as you know.
If you do the work yourself, your time has value doesn't it? When all is said and done, the hidden costs of owning a paid-for house match the cost of renting. And meanwhile you have all your capital tied up. In fact, the hidden costs of a paid-for house can exceed the costs of renting. The big advantage the owners have is in tax savings, but if your income is low anyway this isn't going to mean as much to you.
I lived in California during the Prop 13 war. What is coming up now is more of a general revolt against state and local taxes by the middle class whose standard of living is declining. They find that even a paid-for house is no bargain.
Ahh, but it doesn't work that way.
Let's take a house of, say, $224K value.
State and local taxes are destined to rise sharply because of the huge deficit in public worker pension and health care plans, if nothing else.
Taxes can be $500 per month this house, in many areas.
Add insurance at $100 per month and you are at $600 per month...but that isn't all.
You have repairs that are conservatively another $500 per month for the average house. This is low. It may be more like $800 - $1000 per month.
You have to periodically update a house meaning spend $12K on a new bathroom (very cheap) and $30K on a new kitchen. There is yard work, new roof periodically, paint, carpet and flooring, window treatments, caulking and repair of plumbing, and much more as you know.
If you do the work yourself, your time has value doesn't it? When all is said and done, the hidden costs of owning a paid-for house match the cost of renting. And meanwhile you have all your capital tied up. In fact, the hidden costs of a paid-for house can exceed the costs of renting. The big advantage the owners have is in tax savings, but if your income is low anyway this isn't going to mean as much to you.
I lived in California during the Prop 13 war. What is coming up now is more of a general revolt against state and local taxes by the middle class whose standard of living is declining. They find that even a paid-for house is no bargain.
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