z31maniac wrote:
Like someone else said, if saving up $25k is going to keep up from buying for a number of years until the markets recover, prices go back up and interest rates are higher, then I'm not sure I completely understand the advantage of waiting.
The advantage is that you will own the house, rather than the house owning you.
For starters, if it will take you more than two years to save up $25k on a $100k income, you're not living a lifestyle that is conducive to home ownership. What are you going to do when your A/C goes out and costs $X,000 to repair or replace, or you need a new roof at $Y,000, etc.? If you're used to saving 10-15% of your income, these expenses are mere blips. If you're used to spending all of your income, these are serious PITAs.
Second, how much more interest will you pay over the life of the loan by financing 100% today vs. 80% in two years. Keep in mind that your interest rate will be higher and/or you'll be paying significant PMI premiums on a 100% loan that you won't have with a conventional 80% loan.
Third, there's no guarantee that prices and/or interest rates will be significantly higher in two years. You're in OKC, right? OKC didn't see anywhere near the bubble that other markets did, and thus didn't see anywhere near the drop. Moreover, interest rates have been at "historic lows" for years now. Sure they go up and down a little, but I really doubt you're going to see late 70s/early 80s mortgage rates any time soon.
The world won't end if you don't own a home today or tomorrow. The best money advice I've ever heard is "never be in a hurry to spend a lot of money."
z31maniac wrote:
As far as the down payment assistance, there is a reason we put the note just in her name, my income alone excludes us from any freebie type programs.
There are only two things in home ownership that are dumber than buying a house with someone you're not married to. The first is being the only one on the note, which it appears she's doing. The second is paying on someone else's note, which it appears you're doing.
This has nothing to do with my views on unmarried cohabitation and everything to do with being a lawyer and, therefore, knowing what happens when such an arrangement goes pear-shaped. "Clusterberkeley" is the most succinct legal term.
z31maniac wrote:
I'm not trying to sound indignant/arrogant, but buying a $80-90k home on a combined gross income of just over $100k a year, doesn't seem all that irresponsible even if we aren't putting $20k down. Our payment will work out to be around 11-14% of our net income (yay cheap property taxes), FAR below the somewhat acceptable standard of 27-30% of your gross.
If this were accurate, it's the smartest thing you've said so far. Unfortunately, not being married, you don't have a combined gross income. You have an income, and she has an income. I don't know what they are individually, but if yours is too high to qualify for various low-income buyer programs, hers is probably too small to buy a $80-90k house. Given that she's going to be the only one on the note, that's effectively what she's doing, and the word for that is "stupid."
Moreover, a much better rule of thumb is not to buy any more than you can afford on 25% of your net (not gross). Anything more than that starts to affect other parts of your life. You start having to either give up your discretionary spending or saving for future things like retirement, etc. One is no fun; the other is just dumb.
z31maniac wrote:
Could we put our own money down on the house? Yes. But if the state is going to GIVE it to us, why not take advantage of it, right?
I'll leave the commentary on the moral and macroeconomic aspects of this to others. As a practical matter, there's nothing wrong with it except that I've never seen such a program that gets you a 20% down payment. Typically, they're on the order of 3%.
In that situation, you've got no equity to start with. Thus, if you needed to sell, you're forced with coming up with not insubstantial amounts of money for commissions, closing costs, etc. Most people who can't or don't want to come up with a substantial down payment can't come up with that kind of money when they sell. Worse yet, if property values decline (a distinct possibility) you've got to come up with even more money or get the bank to agree to a short sale, dinging your credit in the process.
The bottom line is this, you are ready to buy a house if all of the following are true (with apologies to Dave Ramsey):
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You have at least 3, preferably 6 month's living expenses set aside in addition to your down payment.
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You have a 20% down payment (10% absolute minimum).
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Your payment on a 15yr fixed rate note will be no more than 25% of your take home pay.
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You are married to anyone you're buying with and have been for at least a year.
If any of those conditions aren't met, buying a house is asking for trouble. Just because people get away with it, doesn't make it a good idea.