FunkMiller
Banned
Jesus H Christ, obvs you back onto a 5* golf course and overlook the ocean
Jesus H Christ, obvs you back onto a 5* golf course and overlook the ocean
This is what we did too. A 30-year mortgage but we paid at least double every month (so effectively 15-year with some wiggle room if times got tough). If we came into some extra money we'd throw it towards the mortgage as well and ended up paying off the whole thing in under a decade. Make sure you clarify the amount is going towards principal balance and not the interest and you'll save thousands of dollars. Make paying off the mortgage a priority and you'll be in good shape!I discussed the details with my mortgage lender and he said I could make as many payments as I wanted. All I would have to do is make sure the extra payments are going to the principal balance of the loan and not the interest. Doing this could cut my loan down to five years or more depending on how much I pay. Plus, it will help out when we decide to refinance.
Congrats OP. My dumb ass is about to move to the Sydney Eastern suburbs, where a 3 bed 2 bath with that amount of space would cost about
*checks notes*
3.9 million US dollars.
Luckily I'm only renting.
Congrats op.
advice: Build up a few months of savings before tackling anything more than a grand to secure yourself against future job issues.
Don't let the wife nag you into spending on your card or taking out loans "for the house" etc.
I didn't and I worked like a dog for nearly 2 decades. If I stayed as I was above before I caved in my life would have been far easier.
How in the hell does anyone buy a 3 bed 2 bath house for $3.9 million?
Vancouver has waterfront condos (they skew big though, so not tiny 1 bed 1 bath units) that can be $5M. Good views, good cities, and a populace with bottomless pockets will do that. If you skim the link, there's a townhouse downtown going for $10.8M.How in the hell does anyone buy a 3 bed 2 bath house for $3.9 million?
If you want to live in the best part of a major city, that's kind of the way it goes unfortunately. Location is always the driving factor of cost. Sydney's eastern suburbs are much the same as London north west or Tribeca in NY. It's dumb as shit, but there you go.
Yeah definitely, that is always good advice. Unfortunately, we do have to spend some money to fix up the house and buy appliances but I always intend to have at least 10k in the savings account for emergencies.Congrats op.
advice: Build up a few months of savings before tackling anything more than a grand to secure yourself against future job issues.
Don't let the wife nag you into spending on your card or taking out loans "for the house" etc.
I didn't and I worked like a dog for nearly 2 decades. If I stayed as I was above before I caved in my life would have been far easier.
Ok.....but you said suburbs. If I tried to buy a house actually in Atlanta then yeah, talking about some major cash, but the suburbs are generally much cheaper here. Maybe I'm not following.
It’s a term used 2 ways; city suburbs are close to downtown just zoned residential or “mixed use” that are super expensive. They are actually fairly urban are still described as a “suburb of a city.”Ok.....but you said suburbs. If I tried to buy a house actually in Atlanta then yeah, talking about some major cash, but the suburbs are generally much cheaper here. Maybe I'm not following.
It’s a term used 2 ways; city suburbs are close to downtown just zoned residential or “mixed use” that are super expensive. They are actually fairly urban are still described as a “suburb of a city.”
Then there’s “suburban sprawl” made famous in America, the quintessential “many square miles of mostly houses and some grocery stores and chain restaurants here or there.” That’s where the cheaper housing is supposed to be, but doesn’t always hold true depending on where you live.
1. LouisianaIt feels good to know that hard work pays off in the end. !