Do you need to own a home?
- FrankN
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- Wanderer
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- FrankN
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JGibbs wrote:
That method seems smarter to me. I can't imagine balancing two mortgages on top of everything else. Seems to me that scenario could push a seller into accepting a lower offer just to be done with it.JacksonM wrote: My grandparents did it perfectly. The closing of their old home was contingent on the closing of their new home. They bought in the morning and sold in the afternoon.
Did the seller of the new home have an issue with that though? That is the only hangup I could see with that. If I were selling ahome, I wouldn't want another home sale to be contingent of selling my house.
- JGibbs
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That method seems smarter to me. I can't imagine balancing two mortgages on top of everything else. Seems to me that scenario could push a seller into accepting a lower offer just to be done with it.JacksonM wrote: My grandparents did it perfectly. The closing of their old home was contingent on the closing of their new home. They bought in the morning and sold in the afternoon.
- JacksonM
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JGibbs wrote: Buy another house before the other is sold? I know people who have done it and they wound up selling their home for much less because of it. I'm not seeing the positive side. Wouldn't that hurt your credit rating and your ability to get a mortgage for the second house? Maybe this works if the first home is paid off and the buyer is looking for to move or looking for a vacation home.
I finally did look at the article. One of the reasons is basically the fear of missing out. If you just LOVE the new one but don't have a buyer, it could be worth the leap. Seems to me you won't love trying to pay two mortgages. My grandparents did it perfectly. The closing of their old home was contingent on the closing of their new home. They bought in the morning and sold in the afternoon.
- JGibbs
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- JacksonM
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- FrankN
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- Tishbel
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- FrankN
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Replied by FrankN on topic Owning a home is wonderful as long as you can afford it.
- Breakinger
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FrugalFran wrote:
FrankN wrote: I am still looking right now. Housing prices in my area are at all time highs so I am being extremely cautious about purchasing.
We're in a similar boat because even though we live in a very rural area, there has been a pipeline boom going on here for several years. All that money coming into the region jacked up prices big time.
Even though my husband and I already own our own home, we've been looking for the past few years for some place else to live. We absolutely love our home right now, but we don't like the location of it. We have also been running into the issue of home prices being on the rise. Does anyone know why it seems like they are very expensive again?
- MidSouthGal
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But yes, for me we already own a home.
- Wanderer
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- Moneyes
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- FrugalFran
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Wanderer wrote: As we are aware from the melt down of 2008-2009, high prices can leave us underwater so caution is extremely important. Yes, paying rent leaves no equity but being underwater is worse as you have no equity and an albatross around your neck!!!
No doubt, Wanderer. It's amazing to me how many people I know that are under water with their homes. Some of them are well enough off that they can afford to take the loss, but others are just walking away.