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When you buy (mortgage) a home, it becomes yours. You can update it, tear down a wall, fix up the front lawn, paint the walls or change the light fixtures...and no one can tell you not to. Renters never have a 'home'...it always belongs to someone else.
Tax deductions are nice, but lets remember that its not a tax deduction on the house, it's a deduction on the interest you pay. The goal is to own your home, which means no deduction.
There are a lot of lucky people that got rich by buying AMZN stock too, but it's important to realize that as with the stock market in the late 90s, housing just went through an extremely anomalous period. Returns from this period should not be expected to repeat.
The tax deduction argument really bugs me. I see otherwise intelligent people parrot this fallacy. Many of them itemize *only because of their mortgage*. In other words, they don't get to deduct the full interest anyway. They only really get to deduct the portion of the interest that pushes them above the standard deduction.
Jonathan
If you're interested in timing and contrarian views, then you should be reading Harry Dent Jr and his economic forecasts.
Closing costs, taxes, moving expenses and the high percentage of your payments that is devoted to interest in the early years devours most if not all of the financial benefits of owning for the first few years. 3 years is the barest minimum. 5 is better. Longer is great.
Also, if you choose to buy, pick the appropriate mortgage for your needs. For the overwhelming majority of finance-minded people I think the 15-year fixed is the ONLY mortgage to choose (I have some mortgage analysis up on my site if you're interested). If you have to get a 30-year mortgage to make your payments you are trying to buy more house than you can afford -- look elsewhere. 30-year mortgages are financially deadly.
Good luck making your choice!
If renting is substantially cheaper then this may not apply. You're paying a lot extra for the investment and your leverage isn't so great anymore. Where I live there is very little cost difference between rent and mortgage payments . . . so consequently it's a no-brainer to buy a home, even if it's relatively short term (2 years at least to avoid taxes at the sale).
These numbers will certainly vary based on all kinds of unknowns. I don't want you to think I'm arguing that house jumping is extremely profitable-- only that in a market that goes up, even barely above inflation, leverage makes a big difference in the financial outcome. It cannot be ignored.
It's just a pet peeve of mine when I see the argument that buying isn't so great because residential real estate only appreciates 1-2% over inflation. It completely ignores a HUGE part of the equation.
Investing in real estate is whole another issue than buying a home.
It is the same reason for selling your house and consolidating your debts ... The #1 cause of death and illness in the G-7 Countries is Stress ... and too much debt load spells stress and purchasing a house is a major stress factor.
It changes your life and reduces your Cash Flow .. ie the amount of liquid funds you have in your pocket ... is a house worth the stress ...
If you're buying something to live in as an investment, then it's not necessarily a good investment. But if you're buying something to live in to have somewhere that is yours to live in, then it makes sense ... unless you move frequently, of course.
None of these articles take into account anything subjective like decortaing and renovating and the like. I agree with Chris on those points.
They also don't consider that while you're not responsible to pay for maintenance in renting, you're also at the mercy of your landlord to get it done. I've had more than one landlord that didn't get things done or did them half-assed to save money.
I'd rather live in my own "investment" than someone else's.
* I can swing all the costs involved.
* I want to be a homeowner.
I think those three points summarize the commitment best. If you aren't ready, than don't do it!