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What percentage of your monthly income do you spend on accommodation?
Michael Jensen
Member #2,870
October 2002
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~%33

Bob
Free Market Evangelist
September 2000
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Rent: $800
Utilities: $225 (Gas: $35, Electricity: $40, Cable: $100, TiVo: $12, Water: $13, Insurance: $25)

This works out to 17% of after-tax income.

Edit:

Quote:

5% per year on a $100,000 mortgage is under $420 per month

You're assuming no payment towards the house itself. On a 15 year mortgage, that's $790/month.

The median house in the US sells for $246,000, which is $1,945/month for a 5% / 15 year mortgage over the whole amount.

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- Bob
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HardTranceFan
Member #7,317
June 2006
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Quote:

You're assuming no payment towards the house itself.

Yes, this is interest only payments, no payments to the principle.

Quote:

The median house in the US sells for $246,000 [census.gov], which is $1,945/month for a 5% / 15 year mortgage over the whole amount.

1. Buy a 4 bedroom place for $246K
2. Get in 3 flatmates to pay 1/3 - 1/4 of the interest each.
3. ???
4. Profit! :D

Actually, in about 10 years time you'll have a house worth $492K and you'll only have paid a fraction of the mortgage repayments.

--
"Shame your mind don't shine like your possessions do" - Faithless (I want more part 1)

Neil Walker
Member #210
April 2000
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nobody gets 15 year mortgages unless you've already had 10 years of it. Well, they're 25 in the UK anyway.

Neil.
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Thomas Fjellstrom
Member #476
June 2000
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My place had a 15 year mortgage on it. Till it was payed off by moving it onto a line of credit, then payed off by another sale. Course the original principle was only like $30k.

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nonnus29
Member #2,606
August 2002
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I was paying about $1200 a month including home owners association dues. That was a $127k, 1 bedroom, 1 bath. I put down 5% and had two mortgages, one was at about 5.5% the second was 6.25% I believe. Fifteen year ARMs. I sold after 8 months for $165k. Then 6 months later the bubble started deflating.... ;)

Michael Jensen
Member #2,870
October 2002
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Quote:

I was paying about $1200 a month including home owners association dues.

That's about what rent is going to cost me (the 33% I quoted) -- I'd much rather be buying than renting, I just don't have any credit. Most of the house payments I hear about from people are pretty close to what rent in the same areas cost.

decepto
Member #7,102
April 2006
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Quote:

(income: -12,000 a year)

Quote:

lucky you i have to pay the every semester. im so happy because im on my last semester.

That's negative 12,000 per year. I'm in the red until I graduate. :-X

--------------------------------------------------
Boom!

Indeterminatus
Member #737
November 2000
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Approx. 20% of household income go into accomodation. When we were choosing our appartment, we heard from several sources not to spend more than a third of the income on rent/mortgage.

_______________________________
Indeterminatus. [Atomic Butcher]
si tacuisses, philosophus mansisses

ImLeftFooted
Member #3,935
October 2003
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My first job I lived in an incredibly luxurious apartment and paid 65%-85%, depending on how many hours I worked.

My latest job I paid 14%. Most of my money went into savings (although I went out too much. Hard to resist when your savings add up).

Now I'm living off the savings from my last job and credit cards until my company gets profitable.

nonnus29
Member #2,606
August 2002
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Quote:

Now I'm living off the savings from my last job and credit cards until my company gets profitable.

I'd love to do that, I even have a really good niche market to fill. But I have an unreasonable fear of being poor (again).

ImLeftFooted
Member #3,935
October 2003
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Like most things in life, I just view it as practice. I'm not starting a company to get rich, I'm starting a company to learn how to get rich.

Maybe this sort of attitude would make it easier for you?

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