The reasoning is nuts, just nuts. "Oh, we'll add this and that and we can sell it for X in ten years". You have no clue whatsoever what will be what in ten years! Aliens could invade Oklahoma and make your property worthless! Or maybe just another '08-style real estate crash. Or who knows what else!
To be honest, I think a house has to be the poorest investment I've seen. You don't make money on it, no way, not after you get done paying loan interest, caring for the structure and the attached land, etc. I bet if I added up everything I spent on the Steinholme it would dwarf anything I could sell it for. You buy a house because you need somewhere to live and you want some space. You want a deal in living space go live in a trailer park.
If you must have a garage, fine, build a garage. If your cars are that valuable or you like to wrench, it makes good sense. Personally, I think just buying a house with an extant garage makes more sense, but that's just me. But building one because you think the market will be X and therefore you can sell for Y is pure and utter foolishness.
Out here where I live, and people have tractors, and various machinery to store, adding a garage or pole barn always increases the resale value of the property over one without it. Always.
Market fluctuations like ‘08, caused by government meddling in loan guarantees and nearly crashing the world economy, are one offs. Yes, if you have to sell during the correction, you’re screwed.
But generally, housing prices climb with inflation, just like everything else does. Buying (even via a mortgage with reasonable time limits on it, never 30 years, you won’t ever be there that long) locks in a price at X date, while overall prices continue to rise, unless you live in an area where significant job loss and mass exodus are occurring or overbuilding happened.
Which in terms of the entire country, aren’t common. Even then, housing rarely falls in the depressed areas, it just sits level and many rentals sit empty for a while. Population continues to grow, housing is always eventually in demand.
The better “bones” you buy in a house the less major maintenance is needed. Paint it inside and out once in a while or better, buy brick exteriors. Real brick, not crappy brick siding, if you can get it. Change the carpet out every so often. Appliances as needed.
People tend to waste a lot of money on landscaping but it’s not required unless you live somewhere with a fascist HOA. Install rocks and spray for weeds in the rocks and done. Watering (here in the arid high plains) and mowing grass is stupid. A dump truck with many tons of nice river rock and a couple of weekends shoveling rocks on top of a good thick plastic weed barrier, and you’ll have a lovely no maintenance “lawn”.
Not buying housing is fine, you just have to budget for ever increasing rent, which is just following inflation, if you live anywhere normal. The owner is certainly going to pass along all costs to the renter, or sell it, if they have any business sense at all. Including maintenance. You’re not getting any break from maintenance on a rental. It’s in the monthly price.
Pay a house off, it’s an asset. Until then, it’s a rental from a bank and they’re just making you maintain their rental property. Most people are renting, whether to a private landlord, or a bank. They don’t own squat until they have the title in hand.