Want to know why so many people on here discourage ownership? It is because no matter how prepared you THINK you are for airplane ownership, you're not as prepared as you should be.
Renting is far more economical for most people than purchasing is, considering the mission of most people is 2 people + baggage to an airport 2 hours away. If you're making that trip every other month, it costs you maybe 480-600 bucks per trip at 120-150/hr, which is roughly 3,000-3,600 bucks a year.
A hangar alone can run anywhere from less than 100 dollars a month to 600. Fuel right now is anywhere from 3.00-5.50+/gal. Insurance can be anywhere from 500-1000. Annual flat rates run in the ballpark of 1200-1800 flat rate if NOTHING needs to be fixed.
So say your mission remains the same. Find a decent hangar for 150 bucks a month. Insurance of 600 bucks a year. Fuel at 4 bucks a gallon. 10 gal/hr *4 hours per round trip. That's 1,800 in hangar cost + 600 insurance + 960 fuel + 1400 annual. $4,760 per year. That doesn't include a plane payment if you have paid cash, but you really should add a theoretical payment into your cost calculations. Obviously the more you fly, the more both of those numbers rented or owned climb, and you will find a point where it is more economical to buy rather than rent.
But the reason so many people try to warn others off purchasing is because even those of us who believe we are most prepared can end up paying $36,000 for a plane and get hit with a $14,862 bill at annual.
All that being said, there is a damned good amount of people here who are absolutely providing sage advice when it comes to planes that might suit the bill, just as there are people cautioning you on what to buy. It is like advice from a parent when you're a kid. You roll your eyes at the time, then you come back later with scars and gray hair and realize they were right, even if you didn't like hearing it at the time.
With all due respect, a lot of that is not applicable to the OP. There is an assumption on POA that "buyer's" haven't done any homework on their local costs, and have no clue what their bank balance is to be able to afford post-purchase costs.
When I was buying my plane, I set a purchase budget of "$XX,XXX" as that is what I wanted to spend. It had NOTHING to do with what I could AFFORD to spend. I still remember one of the replies being "well, if you can only spend $XX,XXX, then you can't afford to own a plane, as you will need TWICE $XX,XXX to be able to maintain it because of......____________ (fill in the blank; hangar, insurance, imaginary engine depreciation, fuel, etc...) The person making the comment had ZERO knowledge of my financial capacity, his sole purpose in commenting was to Discourage Aircraft Ownership At All Times.
Sorry you had a $14.8k annual, I haven't followed your threads, so I don't know what caused your annual, but it looks like something that should have been caught with pre-buys. My first annual on my 182 was $850, including oil change, if I remember. My plane goes into the shop today for the second annual, and I am expecting $750 for this year's annual.
I have another thread on here somewhere, and my first year's ownership costs were $85 an hour, wet.
I can tell you, before I bought, I had a good handle on my insurance costs, knew my tie downs, knew my annual inspection costs, knew the costs of the upgrades I contemplate in the next 1-5 years.
Yes, I probably spend $4760 a year on ownership.... or more... But, I spend far less on Airlines than I used to, I spend far less time sitting in airport terminals, I spend far less time getting frisked by TSA agents, I spend far less time renting cars and driving remote job sites, or to remote camping sites. I don't "bill my time out", but even putting a $100/hr or $50/hr cost on my time, the airplane is cheaper than other methods of travelling.
Last week, an employee of mine was involved in a fatal accident with a company truck, 350 miles away, by road. I was at the accident site in 2 hours because of the plane, able to help my employee, deal with state troopers, and make the necessary arrangements. All this happened after 5pm, so the options of renting a plane would be slim, and driving would have put me there 5+ hours later, and prevented a return trip the same night.