Home Buying & Real Estate Thread

Chewie, we were looking at Meritage out by the Southlands Mall area but we decided to go a little north due to me working downtown and my girl working in Stapleton. You have a beautiful home.

Thanks, bud! We're you guys looking in Horseshoe Ridge in South aurora? We looked there first but ended up down in Parker

Wife and I both work downtown (18th & California) but her job subsidizes parking, so we drive. Otherwise wed be on the light rail
 
@beezygotsole, thank you for the warm wishes, kind sir. @fraij, honestly our salesman didn't recommend the panels, considering how good the builder was with bills.

@edshoecator, no worries at all, my good man. Here in the southern suburbs of Denver, Colorado being the #2 hottest real estate market in the country (#1 San fran), we only paid $476k.
here are your options in l.a. 
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A lot of home sub 476k look nothing like that 3 story masterpiece. 
 
Thats why I live in denver. I am born and raised in dc, RG3, gogo music, and mambo sauce all day lol. But I couldn't afford to live how I'm living now if I moved back to the east coast. Go RG3! DC for life! Lol

We paid $476K for our house. Our realtor, who is originally from Philly, said out house would cost 7-8 hundred in anew east coast city market
I can confirm that. I am in philly suburbs (one of the top counties and townships in the us) and that is probably a million dollar house out here, just based off your pics. You aren't touching new construction out here for less than 7-800k, even new townhomes and carriage homes are 400k+. We paid 370k for our 3 br 2.5 ba house, completely rennovated, but its about half the sq ft of yours. I think housing is expensive here but I can't even fathom living in sf, Seattle, boston, etc.
 
Nice, I'm considering everything when I'm ready to buy a home. I'd pay a little more up front to save in the future. Solar would be great imo if the state doesn't block the installation
Thats why I live in denver. I am born and raised in dc, RG3, gogo music, and mambo sauce all day lol. But I couldn't afford to live how I'm living now if I moved back to the east coast. Go RG3! DC for life! Lol

We paid $476K for our house. Our realtor, who is originally from Philly, said out house would cost 7-8 hundred in anew east coast city market
I can confirm that. I am in philly suburbs (one of the top counties and townships in the us) and that is probably a million dollar house out here, just based off your pics. You aren't touching new construction out here for less than 7-800k, even new townhomes and carriage homes are 400k+. We paid 370k for our 3 br 2.5 ba house, completely rennovated, but its about half the sq ft of yours. I think housing is expensive here but I can't even fathom living in sf, Seattle, boston, etc.

That's PA in general. Pittsburgh is the same way. Some of the houses posted in this thread would go for $400k+ easily and be 20+ min outside the city through the tunnels or over the bridges.
 
Nice, I'm considering everything when I'm ready to buy a home. I'd pay a little more up front to save in the future. Solar would be great imo if the state doesn't block the installation
That's PA in general. Pittsburgh is the same way. Some of the houses posted in this thread would go for $400k+ easily and be 20+ min outside the city through the tunnels or over the bridges.
maybe Pittsburgh and philly, but there is a whole lot of nothing in pa. I could have gotten a beautifuk new construction in the 400k range but I would be 45-60 min from where I'm at now and I'm already ~40 min from downtown. I work from home now, but I've worked with people before that live out there in their nice houses but they drive 1.5 hrs to work every day. No thanks. And no one wants to come visit you when you live in the middle of nowhere. :lol:

My next place will be a lake house in the poconos. You can get those things for dirt cheap. Screw the jersey shore and those exorbitant prices. :lol:
 
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Nice, I'm considering everything when I'm ready to buy a home. I'd pay a little more up front to save in the future. Solar would be great imo if the state doesn't block the installation
That's PA in general. Pittsburgh is the same way. Some of the houses posted in this thread would go for $400k+ easily and be 20+ min outside the city through the tunnels or over the bridges.
maybe Pittsburgh and philly, but there is a whole lot of nothing in pa. I could have gotten a beautifuk new construction in the 400k range but I would be 45-60 min from where I'm at now and I'm already ~40 min from downtown. I work from home now, but I've worked with people before that live out there in their nice houses but they drive 1.5 hrs to work every day. No thanks. And no one wants to come visit you when you live in the middle of nowhere. :lol:

My next place will be a lake house in the poconos. You can get those things for dirt cheap. Screw the jersey shore and those exorbitant prices. :lol:

Exactly :lol: the people that way out the way fight to get on the bus to get the park 'n ride because they know it's a 45min wait for the next one. I like the convenience of being close too much that's why I'm not buying until we move out of state. I want a nice house for a great price that's not too far from everything and you really can't get that in PA, not to mention, the property taxes here are crazy. Add that w/ the bad roads, inspections, emissions, vehicle registration, gas tax, liquor tax, etc...Yea, it's time for me to go :lol:
 
Exactly :lol: the people that way out the way fight to get on the bus to get the park 'n ride because they know it's a 45min wait for the next one. I like the convenience of being close too much that's why I'm not buying until we move out of state. I want a nice house for a great price that's not too far from everything and you really can't get that in PA, not to mention, the property taxes here are crazy. Add that w/ the bad roads, inspections, emissions, vehicle registration, gas tax, liquor tax, etc...Yea, it's time for me to go :lol:
I'd want out of Pittsburgh too :lol:. I'm kidding, I've spent a good amount of time in Pittsburgh and always enjoyed it. My property taxes are dirt cheap in my school district, but if you go to any of the surrounding ones it's significantly more.
 
I really should pack and leave this expensive for no good reason *** Los Angeles.

Dawg...I have friends from dc who live in LA and have visited several times. I friggin' love it there. But man, I simply couldn't afford it lol

I grew up on dc, ultimately a transplant city, where it has its own identity...but all the transplants put their stamp on it too. Very much like how LA felt to me. If we could afford to live there, we would. Easily one of the coolest cities in america

Weed is legal here in Denver, though. The way folks go to the liquor store in most places, that's how we go to the legal weed store lol. "Let me get an 8th of that Honey BooBoo, please." Lol
 
Thanks, bud! We're you guys looking in Horseshoe Ridge in South aurora? We looked there first but ended up down in Parker

Wife and I both work downtown (18th & California) but her job subsidizes parking, so we drive. Otherwise wed be on the light rail

We were actually. I used to work in the Century Link Building downtown before I went to a different firm. Small world my friend.
 
Dawg...I have friends from dc who live in LA and have visited several times. I friggin' love it there. But man, I simply couldn't afford it lol

I grew up on dc, ultimately a transplant city, where it has its own identity...but all the transplants put their stamp on it too. Very much like how LA felt to me. If we could afford to live there, we would. Easily one of the coolest cities in america

Weed is legal here in Denver, though. The way folks go to the liquor store in most places, that's how we go to the legal weed store lol. "Let me get an 8th of that Honey BooBoo, please." Lol
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Yeah, me and the wife have been mulling over selling our properties here and moving to Tacoma or the like with cheap housing and an overall better way of life.

I love the weather...that's all that keeping me here.
 
Hey @AntBanks81



I was in Chicago at the end of last year and got a chance to tour a property. It was a short sale condo built in the early 2000s in the South Loop neighborhood. I asked the agent how rents were and they seemed pretty stable.

Please share some more on what you guys do... I'd love to hear more.

In general it's a little difficult to get those types of returns in CA. However, I'm familiar with neighborhoods in Silicon Valley, Sacramento, and Las Vegas that could work for flips and cap rate buyers.

@XXNAMEBRANDXX

South Loop is one of the best neighborhoods IMO. It's diverse and still has a community feel to it.

I'm still learning. The two partners have over 40 years combined experience in investing. I signed on with them to get the cheat code.
 
Hey @AntBanks81



I was in Chicago at the end of last year and got a chance to tour a property. It was a short sale condo built in the early 2000s in the South Loop neighborhood. I asked the agent how rents were and they seemed pretty stable.

Please share some more on what you guys do... I'd love to hear more.

In general it's a little difficult to get those types of returns in CA. However, I'm familiar with neighborhoods in Silicon Valley, Sacramento, and Las Vegas that could work for flips and cap rate buyers.

@XXNAMEBRANDXX

South Loop is one of the best neighborhoods IMO. It's diverse and still has a community feel to it.

I'm still learning. The two partners have over 40 years combined experience in investing. I signed on with them to get the cheat code.

I need to get out and meet some people in the industry and try to work with them. This is the best way to gain experience in anything IMHO
 
We were actually. I used to work in the Century Link Building downtown before I went to a different firm. Small world my friend.

Indeed it is, sir. Where did you guys end up settling down?

We're in Parker, right off Lincoln Avenue. About a mile from the big wildlife museum, if you know where that is
 
Indeed it is, sir. Where did you guys end up settling down?

We're in Parker, right off Lincoln Avenue. About a mile from the big wildlife museum, if you know where that is

We ended up going out to that Reunion community out near the airport. It is in Commerce City but right next to E470.We went with Richmond American Homes.

I know exactly where that is. My parents live out in Castle Pines and I used to catch the light rail at the Lincoln station. I have rolled through that wildlife museum several times.
 
For someone looking to own first time, I can admit I am not too familiar with a lot of the terms.

If I can put down 20% of my own money, what would be the best route to go without having to pay a ton monthly.

My debt is minimal (few thousand) and credit score currently in the mid 700s (deciding on staying in NY)

Thanks.
 
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For someone looking to own first time, I can admit I am not too familiar with a lot of the terms.

If I can put down 20% of my own money, what would be the best route to go without having to pay a ton monthly.

My debt is minimal (few thousand) and credit score currently in the mid 700s (deciding on staying in NY)

Thanks.

I would go with a 30-year fixed mortgage. Your payment should be pretty reasonable and it will never rise (unless your lender holds an escrow account for you, in which case your insurance and/or property taxes may fluctuate slightly which will slightly alter your payment, but it should still be pretty stable). If you have 20% down available in a market like NY, I'd say jump on it. Mid-700s should get you near a 4% rate right now which is pretty solid.
 
For someone looking to own first time, I can admit I am not too familiar with a lot of the terms.

If I can put down 20% of my own money, what would be the best route to go without having to pay a ton monthly.

My debt is minimal (few thousand) and credit score currently in the mid 700s (deciding on staying in NY)

Thanks.

Right now we are still in the historically low interest rate period. If you are putting 20% down your monthly payments can't get any lower then they would be right now unless there is another crash that would drop interest rates to 1% (highly unlikely for the next 30 years) . Really your monthly payment is going to depend on the price of the home. Go for a 30 year fixed loan can't beat those payments . If you go for a 15 year loan your interest rate will be lower but your payments would be almost doubled.

Here is a good calculator you can use to estimate your total payment based on home price,interest rates, down payments, and taxes. Click on advanced to get a more accurate payment estimate.

http://www.zillow.com/mortgage-calculator/
 
For someone looking to own first time, I can admit I am not too familiar with a lot of the terms.

If I can put down 20% of my own money, what would be the best route to go without having to pay a ton monthly.

My debt is minimal (few thousand) and credit score currently in the mid 700s (deciding on staying in NY)

Thanks.
Stay with a fixed rate loan. Interest rates for Adjustable rate mortgages (ARM) may be slightly less, but rates have never been lower, so once the rate adjusts in 5-7 years, your payment is almost guaranteed to go up unless the economy takes another dive, in which case your home may be be worth less than you owe and you won't be able to refinance anyways.
 
trying to decide if i should refi to a 15-year fixed or just stick with my current loan and pay the extra towards principal.

current rate is 4.375% ($158k over 26.5 years remaining). new rate would be 3.5% ($164k loan). monthly payment would increase about $300. seems like a no-brainer, but closing costs are in the $5-6k range.

anyone know of any good calculators to determine how long it would take to break even or figure out my "effective interest rate" if i just pay the extra $300 towards principal on my current loan?

i've found a few decent ones, but none seem to have quite all the inputs i'm looking for.
 
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trying to decide if i should refi to a 15-year fixed or just stick with my current loan and pay the extra towards principal.

current rate is 4.375% ($158k over 26.5 years remaining). new rate would be 3.5% ($164k loan). monthly payment would increase about $300. seems like a no-brainer, but closing costs are in the $5-6k range.

anyone know of any good calculators to determine how long it would take to break even or figure out my "effective interest rate" if i just pay the extra $300 towards principal on my current loan?

i've found a few decent ones, but none seem to have quite all the inputs i'm looking for.
A good excel sheet should work fine for what you need. How come the closing costs are so high? A reasonable amount would be in the range of $2000.

When you're talking about going from a 30 to a 15 year, you're not really looking at a "break even" since the purpose is meant to save money on the backend after you've paid off the loan. You're going to save a couple hundred thousand by paying it off early, so it's worth it. The real question is are you able to. If you're going to pay that much in closing costs, look into refinancing into a 20 year with no closing costs, or minimal closing costs. You should still be able to get something under 4% now.

I just refinanced a couple months ago with a no cost. I paid 1/8% more, but got something like $200 back instead of paying $1500 at the table. The breakeven from going from 1 30 year payment to another on a company's payment table is typically about 7-8 years from my experience. Since I'm planning on staying here 10 years, I took the highest rate with lowest closing cost and called it a day. If I stay here the full 10 years I'm not that far behind. If I move sooner, I come out ahead.
 
What are your opinions on turnkey properties? Are they a good investment for cashflow income?

Depends on the numbers. You have to figure out what your cash flow would be if that is all you are looking for. If the numbers work for you they are fine, I would just get some referrals to make sure it is a good turnkey company.
 
Friend of mine is looking to invest in a couple property lots :smh: I did some research and there's a lot of scams out there but dude won't listen. The owner of the lots is even talking about writing the up contract and not going through the bank :smh:. We even showed him that dude is behind on the property taxes so that will become your burden. He thinks we are being negative because it sounds too good to be true. The seller is even willing to take a loss on it. So many red flags,

:lol: :lol: venting in a real estate thread
 
 
What are your opinions on turnkey properties? Are they a good investment for cashflow income?
They can be a good investment. However, you're generally going to get more competition from other buyers when bidding on the property. You'll also likely get a better deal if you're able to buy a fixer upper and do the work yourself or pay someone you know to do it. Most home buyers don't want to go into it having to do much work on the property, so you'll might be able to negotiate a lower price on something that needs a little work or at the very least waiting until it's a buyer's market to buy the property.
 
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