sophia jane
Decked Out
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2005
- Posts
- 15,225
Pure said:i remember an article some time ago about own v. rent: with a little juggling of figures, the thing came out a dead heat: provided--the 'down payment' that the renter saved was invested, and provided that the renter saved and invested each mo.
the other factor is that the gains of real estate are sometimes miscalcuted. for instance, someone buys for 100,000 and sells 20 years later for 300,000. It sounds enormous, but it's less that 6% per annum compounded monthly. Further the maintenance of a house is at leat 1-2% a year by many estimates. Taking the lower figure, that's $1000 per year on this home just mentioned.
it is true that US homeowners, unlike most others, get to deduct mortgage interest; this would be a huge gift from the governement to the banks, that of course skews the calculation.
You have to remember, too, that neighborhoods change. So, a house purchased and then paid off over twenty years, though it might be a nice house in what was originally a great neighborhood, could easily be end up a great house in a terrible neighborhood, significantly reducing its resale value. This happened to my grandparents; around the time their house was paid off, the town where they lived, a used to be great suburb, began to change and within a few years no one really wanted to live there anymore, and he's stuck with the house.