CJones
Final Approach
We're almost to the stage of life where we have outgrown our current house (boys are getting to the age where sharing a room isn't cool - even with a custom bunk-bed setup). Also, it turns out the middle school we're zoned for isn't a slam dunk like the elementary school was. We have one with two more years left at the MS and one that has one more year at ES before moving to the MS. We could move a few miles down the road and get into a drastically different MS zone and remain in the zone we're currently in for future HS (which we like).
We're in a good spot financially with the current house. Bought at the bottom of the market in 2011 when prices and interest rates were record low. Comps in our neighborhood are selling for 3x what we paid for this place in 2011. We've upgraded mechanical and recently did a downstairs remodel. Right now really the only 'big' expenses looming over us are needing to replace the nearly 30 year old (currently leak-free) roof and a similar 'refresh' of upstairs.
As we ponder things, we have a couple of options.
1. We could sell this house and cash out on our 'buy low, sell high' scenario. We could comfortably walk away with $100-200k (likely more, but I'm being uber conservative) in our pockets - even after putting on a new roof and potentially doing the upstairs remodel. The cash could go to offset some of the inflation price on a new place.
OR
2. We could keep this house and rent it out. We think (just scanning ads locally), we could rent our current place in the neighborhood of $2500/mo. That would help offset the payment payment on a new house, which would basically mean we would still be paying close to our current house payment amount, but for an upgraded and larger house.
I understand the pains of maintaining a rental property. I worked for an apartment management company in college and was after-hours on-call there, so I have a working understanding of the stupidity of renters. My parents also own a rental property elsewhere, and they have horror stories to share as well.
We like the idea of having the rental property sitting here as an income source, but are we missing the 'big payout' of 'buy low, sell high' with this place? Will we look back and say "Yeah, $2500/mo is nice, but if we had cashed out back then..." For folks that are already in the housing rental game, are you buying new properties right now, are you holding steady, or are you selling off to cash out and waiting for the market to come back down to jump back in?
What else am I missing? I know we'll lose the 'Homestead exemption' on property taxes for the current house b/c it is only valid for your 'primary residence'. I assume homeowners insurance would go up for a rental property - does anyone have an idea of what that difference is - 1x, 1.5x, 6x?
Anything else?
We're in a good spot financially with the current house. Bought at the bottom of the market in 2011 when prices and interest rates were record low. Comps in our neighborhood are selling for 3x what we paid for this place in 2011. We've upgraded mechanical and recently did a downstairs remodel. Right now really the only 'big' expenses looming over us are needing to replace the nearly 30 year old (currently leak-free) roof and a similar 'refresh' of upstairs.
As we ponder things, we have a couple of options.
1. We could sell this house and cash out on our 'buy low, sell high' scenario. We could comfortably walk away with $100-200k (likely more, but I'm being uber conservative) in our pockets - even after putting on a new roof and potentially doing the upstairs remodel. The cash could go to offset some of the inflation price on a new place.
OR
2. We could keep this house and rent it out. We think (just scanning ads locally), we could rent our current place in the neighborhood of $2500/mo. That would help offset the payment payment on a new house, which would basically mean we would still be paying close to our current house payment amount, but for an upgraded and larger house.
I understand the pains of maintaining a rental property. I worked for an apartment management company in college and was after-hours on-call there, so I have a working understanding of the stupidity of renters. My parents also own a rental property elsewhere, and they have horror stories to share as well.
We like the idea of having the rental property sitting here as an income source, but are we missing the 'big payout' of 'buy low, sell high' with this place? Will we look back and say "Yeah, $2500/mo is nice, but if we had cashed out back then..." For folks that are already in the housing rental game, are you buying new properties right now, are you holding steady, or are you selling off to cash out and waiting for the market to come back down to jump back in?
What else am I missing? I know we'll lose the 'Homestead exemption' on property taxes for the current house b/c it is only valid for your 'primary residence'. I assume homeowners insurance would go up for a rental property - does anyone have an idea of what that difference is - 1x, 1.5x, 6x?
Anything else?
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