I'm not going to buy a house in Florida, actually I don't even live in the US. I just like to watch these beautiful neighborhoods and dream living there some day.
I paid up all my mortgages in 2yrs while working with a Financial Adviser. I’m 60 and my husband 64 we are both retired with over $3 million in net worth and no debts. We got to realize that the secret to financial freedom is making better investments.
If anything, the situation will worsen. Affordable housing will soon become unaffordable. Therefore, I advise taking action now, as today's prices will seem low compared to the future. Until the Fed takes more stringent measures, I anticipate widespread hysteria due to rampant inflation. You can't remove the band-aid halfway.
Home prices will come down eventually, but for now; get your money (as much as you can) out of the housing market and get into the financial markets or gold. The new mortgage rates are crazy, add to that the recession and the fact that mortgage guidelines are getting more difficult. Home prices will need to fall by a minimum of 40% (more like 50%) before the market normalizes. If you are in cross roads or need sincere advise on the best moves to take now its best you seek an independent advisor who knows about the financial markets.
There are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Sophia Maurine Lanting” for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She’s quite known in her field, look her up.
Keep in mind that during the 80’s people were encouraged to save due to the interest rates. Right now there’s very little incentive to save because those who are saving are watching those who are reckless taking it in. I’ve been trying to save for a home and it’s been discouraging to watch prices continue to not budge because there’s people willing to get into a mortgage where they’re paying 40% of their income. It’s insane.
I advise you to invest in stocks to balance out your real estate, Even the worst recessions offer wonderful buying opportunities in the markets if you're cautious. Volatility can also result in excellent short-term buy and sell opportunities. This is not financial advice, but buy now because cash is definitely not king right now!
You're correct! With the help of an investment coach, I was able to diversify my 250K portfolio across markets and produce slightly more than $730K in net profit from high dividend yield equities, ETFs, and bonds.
I just googled her name and her website came up right away. It looks interesting so far. I'm going to book a call with her and let you know how it goes. Thanks
My dad hated going to work every day of his life, but he called his job the "golden handcuffs". It was too late to switch jobs because he had a family to support and a pension he would need later on.
@@the_derplerit's a mutual fund thing that everyone in your company contributes too while working, and then when u retire u get fixed income so u don't have to work
I sold my va 2.25 rate assumed. Didn’t want to live there anymore. Home went up about 250k in two years. Sold it bought a home cash where we wanted to be half the size, new, way better neighborhood. I’m 60 but felt trapped with the 2.25. I wasn’t gonna let my rate own me. I don’t live to be entrapped in a rate. I took the gift of ridiculous price increases and didn’t get greedy. Now I’m mortgage free, live down the street from my family and much happier.
Yeah that makes sense you got the best rate of all it's not like you were assuming a 7% mortgage after selling. They usually just call that downsizing and a lot people would jump on something like that if it worked out for them.
@@jizzyjake6783 yeah it was still tough we really wanted a house the same size but after seeing people at our workplaces getting canned, called back into work and just the craziness and uncertainty out there figured who needs the stress and we will live to fight another day on our terms. Options and control of your life make you rich not how much you make. Took a while to figure that out.
I'm in a similar situation but I bought 17 years ago and my home has only appreciated by about 10k in 17 years. You're lucky you earned 250k by doing nothing - I'm not sure if "trapped" is the correct word. A year after I bought my home in 2007 it's value collapsed by 50%
Mortgage rates are currently at an all time high since 2000(24 years) and based on statistics on inflation, we might see that number skyrocket further, a 30-year fixed rate was only 5% this time last year, so do I just keep waiting for a housing crash before buying or redirect my focus to the equity market
True, I mostly just buy and hold stocks, but my portfolio has been mostly in the red for quite awhile now. Unfortunately to be able to make good gains, you’ll need to be consistent and restructure your portfolio frequently.
in my opinion, it was much easier investing back in the 60s but it’s a lot trickier now, those making consistent profit in these times are professionals reason I’ve been using an advisor for the past 5 years to consistently build my portfolio in preparations for retirement.
My CFA ’Melissa Terri Swayne’ , a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
$5,500 a month is BEYOND outrageous. It's like the boiling frog syndrome: people don't know that their lives are out of control until it's too late. It boggles the mind how expensive real estate is now. Housing is not worth what people are paying for it. It's going to crash. Soon. No one can sustain these insane prices.
Not sure if it's possible, but might be good for purchase agreements to include aftershock clauses. Allow people back out when taxes and/or insurance add far more than expected to the monthly cost of the house. Seems like Floridians could benefit where insurance rates are going crazy.
"We" got rid of non resident board member attempting to "rule" and rent , not the ability to rent..perhaps the information you get "from" "association" is from saboteurs and looters or outside "help"...
Paid cash for my house 26 years ago. Apparently I am content with what I have and where I live. Thank God I'm not dealing with having to put a roof over my head, renting/buying, in this screwed up economy.
The one thing that leaped out at me when I was working as a long haul driver was; I have no favorite place to live. Strange but true. I can't even imagine being locked into a long term ANYTHING at $5.5k/mo. That sounds like death to me.
@@thephilosophicalpugilist I'm aware of that, thanks again for your input for those who aren't. It just doesn't sound like a proper use of money if you can literally dump that much cash each month.
Yes that is what it is and with predication and with the government not paying attention it will get worst, so that why one do need a backup plan to save him/herself
@@gsssbsbjdkfdmjd That's very true of you, but what backup plan could be considered and what gives you the courage to say that the situation won't be worse in the future?
My rental property had a 3% mortgage. I was able to make a small profit on it for two years. Then the insurance doubled and I wasn't confident I could keep the rent competitive and break even let alone make a profit. So I sold it while I knew there was still some value.
You will always be competing as a small guppy in a large lake. People who are happy with 3% returns or less, etc. Or they can even lose money for a year. If there are enough renters, fine.
Florida home prices are beyond crazy. We wanted to move a year ago to Sarasota area from Boston area. I went there to look around at real estate for 3 days. The traffic and the prices shocked me, also all the extra HOA fees (100-800$a month) crazy property tax and amount of older homes in need of fixing. Decided not to move - Boston area houses are cheaper - Surprise! Have to suffer here for several more years.
@@rumpointcondo3339 on the flip side, my house in St Pete would sell for about $750k. No HOA. On the water. I'm sure you could afford that coming from Boston ... 65 degrees right now... Not a hint of ❄️.
As a result of Divorce, in Aug 23 - I gave up a 30yr fixed 2.875% mortgage in Georgia. I was on my way to Florida - but changed my mind based on the education of videos like Michael. I am cash rich and house poor....and enjoying the fuck out of it!
Just sold our house today. We had 2.4%, and I don't regret it at all. What we saved in interest rates, we were dumping out the window in property tax increase. Gonna rent for a while and hope for a crash, or maybe just build a house with my bare hands. Something has got to give with this insanity.
We could easily have a flat housing market for years as rates come down due to soft landing and support the housing market. Your sell/rent gamble might blow up in your face.
Great analysis and advice Michael, We escaped the real estate insanity of Florida and moved to the Philippines in 2022. We are raising our two young children here and our quality of life and happiness far exceeds what we experienced anywhere we ever lived in the usa, I am 70 years old... I applied for Philippine Permanent Residency here and in six months my residency will be complete, we really thought outside the box on this one! God Bless all who are suffering and stressed out in the states...John
@@gregorylyon1004he has his own channel . Nice guy. I do watch him almost every Sunday. I do belief in the Philippines you can live down to earth with less baggage . His apartment is small compare to American standard, but he did make it his own which would be unthinkable in The USA or Canada .
After the crash of 1987, every house I rented for the next 14 years was less than the owners’ mortgage payments. All of them took a “loss” until they sold the property.
Not trying to troll, just curious how you came to this conclusion... In 14 years, you effectively paid off half of their mortgage balance. Plus, they reaped the tax benefits which probably netted them another 30%. Then the appreciation, which was on average 70% nationally from 1987-2001. So, how did they lose?
@@ComicLover-oj5svobviously, many areas of the country did not see property values rise as quickly as a few areas… and this persisted for most of the 1980’s…
@@Defundthemasons You're not being clear. What you are saying is that it was just a paper loss that was not realised because they didn't sell. Rather, they held on and waited for the market to improve and then sold well into profit. So the only 'loss' was that they picked up the tab on the difference between the rental income and the mortgage. This is not unheard of.
@@Defundthemasons If you think poor self expression is living outside the Matrix, stay there. You have no idea how to put yourself in the reader's shoes and actually communicate outside of your own headset.
You should do a top 10 list of what buyers miss in there due diligence, for example, inspections, dot plans if any, hoa rules, irrigation water rates, family watchdog, crime maps, loan prepayment penalty, new property tax rate, neighbors yard encroachment, sewer line rotted or full of roots, pool leak, etc etc
One surprisingly common one is simply not making a full comparison of owning costs to renting costs. Their buddy who’s a used house salesman was always going on and on about how renting is throwing money away, so they bought and then realized that mortgage interest is throwing money away, property tax is throwing money away, home insurance is throwing money away, HOA fees are throwing money away, and property upkeep is throwing money away. If you buy because rent money is money out the door that doesn’t increase your net worth, then do a proper comparison to all the money out he door that doesn’t increase your net worth if you are an owner. Additionally, in terms of appreciation, take into account the fact that there’s a high likelihood that your would-be-down-payment-money could make more money in other investment classes than it’s likely to right now in real estate.
our muni doesn't collect enough taxes for snow plowing, so you've gotta basically get up and dig with your neighbors til you hit a plowed road ask around where you're looking about quirks of the town etc
People need boltcutters. They need a plan that is much bigger than "how to buy a house" and afford it for a while. Inflation, taxes and insurance are what is going up and up, not RE itself. And commercial RE? A disaster. Auto loan delinquencies? Disaster. We are headed for a crack up.
Gave up a 2021 rate of 2.6. Developer lied about hundreds of section 8 apartments to be built next door. HOA rates went up 10% every year while we were there. Crime was absolutely abysmal. Assessed tax value went up $100k in only 2 years. It was a bad scenario. Obviously have a much higher rate now and things are tighter but we are in a much safer/better location and we are not in an HOA or in city limits.
The last condo I had in Florida even though I loved the place, the deciding factor in what prompted me to sell was when I saw the housing market slow down last time I went on the county property appraiser and tax collectors website and I looked up every unit in my building to see their purchase price. Sadly it turned out that I I paid the highest price than any other unit in the entire building. by approximately $60,000. Knowing that any of my neighbors could undercut me at any moment I decided to sell. You learn through experience. I wish I had known to look at the county website before I purchased. That unit got foreclosed on a year after I sold it and sat empty for 5 years.
@@justinallport9789 well, it’s history now. I’m in a house but in this city’s cranky housing market I can’t even imagine a landlord accepting my animal menagerie that included 2 pitbulls. Liability disaster!
Thanks Michael for giving people a realistic view of being a landlord. It indeed can be a nightmare. My father owned some properties when I was younger and I saw firsthand the challenges and never wanted to pursue that task.
I don't know how anyone can think these home prices are acceptable. Prices in the Sunbelt are due for a correction with most of the non-local buyers pretty much done. Its the locLs now and they can't afford these ridiculous prices.
I feel the same way. There are OLD ugly homes in my area going for 600k and up that will need a LOT of work in the coming years. These homes are worth around 300k. It's absolutely ridiculous, and the people buying these pieces of junk at top dollar are going to really, really regret it.
If you are not owner occupying, you lose homestead exemption and your tax base is no longer limited to 3% increase in Florida. Your base will be market rate. Also, rental homes have higher insurance rates than owner occupied homes. Add those costs on too @Michael
Wow! What are you talking about? If you don't ever buy a house when you retire you will have to pay rent to someone and that is an expense that will cut into your retirement! I'm 10 years away from paying off my mortgage and 10 years away from retirement. All the while I've deducted the interest off my taxes. Do the math!
Oh my GOSH Michael 😮. Another thousand subscribers. I’m very excited for you. You have got to be the fastest growing channel regarding Real Estate. You’re DEFINITELY CRUSHING IT 😊😊😊😊😊😊😊 Blessings,Carlos ✝️🙏❤️😊🇺🇸
And nobody never thinks about the dirty money laundering happening for years on those properties. They don’t care if those stays empty and if they overpaid : money has been washed.
I think what's crazy is that people don't understand that interest rates really don't matter because you have to factor in the cost of everything. The government can increase or lower the interest rates but that does not change the price of homes or the cost of food or anything else that you have to buy with a currency that is going down more and more in the buying power basically we're going to be like Zimbabwe eventually. Cash is getting hard to come by nowadays and everything is getting digital which means that the government can control and watch what you do and that impacts how they can dictate the prices of everything which then makes you a debt slave because you have to take out more and more debt to acquire these goods. For example just like a mortgage for buying a home you are not buying a home you were buying the debt to acquire that home and basically it is a very expensive rent-to-own program which for 30 years you're paying into and the government can screw you over by impacting everything else around you and let's say that you pay off the home early it doesn't matter because our money literally does not have any value in it, it's not backed by gold and people accept that because that's how the government controls you is by lending you money that they will always be able to adjust to make your behavior what they want. So enclosing your own nothing and be happy because the currency will never be enough to survive but you'll have just enough to make it through the end of the month. Stop playing in today's game get out of the housing market buy some land and do it like your forefathers did that's the only way that you're going to get your freedom is by being the master of your life everyday and you are rich because you have nothing that dictates or control you.
We got a 2 year 2.09% mortgage in Canada which comes due in March 2024 at which time we will pay it off and be mortgage free during retirement. It will just let me sleep at night knowing that interest rates can go back to 20% (like in the 1980s) and I will not loose the house.
Congrats, a wise thing to do. I know Americans are not in favour of paying of there house because the can deduct the interest on there income tax. We live in Calgary and paid our house of with in 10 years . Living an excellent life without loosing any sleep . Happy retirement. A good place to be.
I never understood those short loans Canada has.10 years or 30 down the road you might not be able to afford your house and what if you don't qualify anymore do they kick you out on the street.
HA, yes "the golden handcuffs" is actually a phrase that refers to a state of entrapment due to a good benefit that holds someone from change - a "golden" benefit like your interest rate scenario. My aunt was a teacher and after many years said I have to keep going because of the golden handcuffs - the pension after 30 years. She made it! Without the benefit, she probably would've resigned sooner.
Police and fire department jobs around here, guys are bailing after 5-10 years when there is no pension plan involved. They move on to a different department that still offers or get into a different line of work.
Not all of us just have a house, we have homes acreage, farms, animals all of that and when those big properties were bought at 2.3 like mine we are not stuck due to income reasons we are stuck because others don't qualify to buy
I speak from personal experience from the time I was in my 20s to my 40s, interest rates didn't matter to me. Getting the loan did. I'd pay anything to get a car. All I saw was the bottom line. When I started buying properties, I got them at such a low price. When I sold, I made money. And here's the most important thing. When I took a loan out, it was always short-term with a complete payoff from another property sold. I used banks to my advantage. I've never had a mortgage for more than a year. I own 4 now and am completely debt free.
Michael, you should have a course and charge for it. You may as well get paid for the information you are giving away freely. You have the charisma to be a great teacher!!
We have golden handcuffs right now. My mortgage is so cheap compared to others around me. Good thing we are not looking to move anytime soon. My wife and I both work less than a mile up the road from our house. We’re here for the foreseeable future. But one never knows… Have a great night everyone 🍻
Great move and don’t let it go. Enjoy the low mortgage and freedom. Lots People who waited for a crash thinking they were going to get a foreclosure are stuck renting and are depressed about it. I know someone who did exactly that and gave up on homeownership.
8 out of 10 contacts bought 2-3 homes in naples dec '22. all renovated and listed for 700-800k (size: 1000-1200 sf). they tried renting between 9k-10k, no one renting and no buyers. these homes started listing sept-oct '23. at the moment, total homes they have on naples market is 112. 112 homes!
Waited to get my first house when I could straight buy it out- also gave me time to see if I wanted to stay in the area and where in the area I liked. After that I was free to do what I wanted with my money as far a future properties (was in a stable place I liked, and no questions about my house). I see a huge renting boom since these house prices are out of control and rates not pleasant either. I see many people taking losses- already see it Austin and Houston.
texistan insurance greedflation exploitation is insanely out of control, just as bad as the property tax. The moving goal posts of the financial enslavers ensures everyone trapped in the US eventually gets pulled under.
When it came to making the largest purchase in my entire life, I wanted to know everything and anything in the ins and outs before I even considered purchasing my house. I just assumed that everyone was like that I didn't realize so many people took it so nonchalantly. The fact that this will be the second time this has happened in the last like 12 years it wouldn't hurt to come up with a course.
You should definitely put on a real estate for beginners video. As an older guy, im always amazed how many folks cannot calculate their total income vs total expenses and what percentages should go to what and often more importantly what is the value of certain purchases. Love your common sense content!
Line always go up People are now going to have to stop using the “rent prices never fall” argument. in many cities, at least. I guess in some places rent isn’t down
My co worker had the same discussion with his wife. She was mentioning how much their homes value grew and that they could sell it and make a huge profit. He then says "oh yeah? Where are we gonna go? Everything is overpriced, and we'll just end up paying more anyway."
Miami Lakes went to see 3 houses for rent. I offered $700 less than rental price. I was denied right away. One week later bingo a homeowner gave in. Start offering less. $4500 for $3800.
My friend gave up his 2.5% in favor for a new state, in a way better neighborhood, in a way newer home. Even at 5.5% they pay less and are finally in a safe city. It wasnt that he was struggling with finances, it was the all the bad kids terrorizing the neighborhood while their dead beat parents did nothing about it. On top of that the violence and crime got out of control with all the Californian's moving into town. He made a good choice amd im glad it wasnt because of finance, just personal saftey. So not everyome giving up the low rates is because of financial problems.
I live in Seattle area and the rent vs home values equation is way out of whack here. Unless you put 50% or more down, you are likely going to have a house that costs more than it can rent. It’s been like this for at least 8 years and it’s getting worse.
@@DummMoney-rr1fi That’s really lucky. I noticed here in the Seattle metro, the more expensive cities are the worst, such as Bellevue where you would need to spend about $2 million for a decent house and it’s only worth $4-5k a month rent. A $700k house further north can rent for around $3k. Really odd dynamic.
Houses really work well over the long haul. Think 10 years increments. I took the view that the rental just needed to break even. I did not need the income. Then over 15 years the renter pays off your mortgage. So, it turns into income when you need it in retirement. Also works well as an inflation hedge. Patience required.
I think the sad thing is that this doesn't really apply to housing anymore it's also applies to everything that you want to get from auto loans to bank loans to anything that's tied to a contract that is impacted by the government raising or lowering hikes on the interest. I know that corporations have a say on what they will put down on interest on the monthly payments but this is just too much literally the prices of everything is going up. Even if interest on payments does come down, people do not understand that it doesn't matter what kind of interest you have. If you're literally buying a house for over half a million dollars even at a 2% interest that's still a lot of money to put down every month on something that you are literally renting to own. The only good thing about a mortgage is that this contract allows you to sell the home and recap the money back if you're able to make a profit. But if not right now, you're taking a loss so either way you're just pushing your debt around in a market that's already falling down. This in return makes everyone's homes go down in value which tanks the market and then eventually with all that weight it will come crashing down. The seller then realize that the debt to profit ratio is too big. And with the way that everything is going on I would be surprised if that lump sum of money is only able be survived on with a very restrictive and conservative and minimalist life style you'll eventually own nothing and be happy.
I know someone that has a mortgage of 2% in NYC. His Mortgage is about $2,100 a month. Yet he rents his entire house for $5,500 a Month. He does have to cover the water and heat which is about another $600 a month. So Total he has to pay out of pocket $2700 leaving him with a Profit of $2800 Not bad? People in Florida are buying homes for Half a million but can't get enough to cover the Mortgage because people out here don't make as much money as New Yorkers. Yet New Yorkers come here and buy the houses cash because of the equity they made from selling there homes in NY, Which still make no sense because if they want to leave one day, they will never be able to rent it to Cover a home else where if they choose to rent it out and move again. Houses in Florida are old and need lots of work and people are asking Ridiculous prices. Florida is either going to have to drop there prices or it will bust. Not even New Yorkers want to move here at these prices. Most new homes are also Garbage in Florida. Match Stick homes is what I call them. Thank god insurance companies are requiring some builders to make the bottom part of the home out of Cement Block. The Real Estate Market is on Fire it it will Burn.
Nothing is more stressful than having to move and you cannot sell your place. When the rent does not cover the payments it takes integrity and realizing your error to hang in there until the situation turns around. My Husband and I had that situation when my Husband was in the military. He was transferred, and no matter what we tried to do, we could not sell our place. It took us NINE years to dig ourselves out of that situation. In fact we still have the property. It’s nice that the place is paid off, and we have been turning a profit, but it was bleak to slog it out.
If you rent and dont stuff cash like you owned, you will fall behind. Those that buy are often forced to be that saver, built in as equity. Not realizing or changing your lifestyle is the culprit, if you rent.
They're really not losing $300 per month if they rent at $3500. They're gaining much more in equity with each payment. The gamble is getting good renters and whether or not it keeps it's value.
Equity is down in Seattle about 10% from its peak almost 2 years ago. The equity is not always guaranteed in the short term but generally, you are correct.
There was a time when equity growing by paying the mortgage each month was considerable. A $360k house if paid off in 15 years is $2k per month of average equity growth. $2k is the actual equity growth in year 8 or 9 of a 15 year mortgage on $360k. Appreciation is a bonus if it happens. I'm in year 9 of a 15 year 3.25% mortgage, so 85% of the P&I is P. I realize that many may not see or have patience for this real estate ownership advantage that starts slowly but snowballs eventually. I guess $2k a month is peanuts these days. A rental in Seattle or most blue states is a potential landlord's disaster so I wouldn't do that. My landlord friend in MD is selling everything because of the laws being ridiculous and punishing landlords severely. Moratoriums, squatters, slow courts, biased judges, ridiculous new codes, lack of policing... This could be a good time to teach real estate investors as there may be some foreclosure properties available by 2026. I remember listening to cassette tapes on real estate investing back in the 80's when rates were just finally coming down off of being double digits for 7 long years. If the prices drop down 20%, investors may wade in.
You either have to give up the golden hand cuffs or you are up so much that you just wanna cash out and do something else, for example travel, rent, or just move in with someone. Giving up your low rate doesn’t exactly have to be because they have to.
How about some very thoroughly detailed checklists---one for a stand-alone house and one for a condo. Start with the pre-approval process and end with the closing. Include everything in the lists that buyers should consider and do (and NOT do) during the entire process. I think that would be very helpful.
It was as astounding how much money people were casually throwing around outbidding others. I had friends who casually through an extra $15k on their offer because their agent advised it. Sure, $335k Vs $350k is not a huge difference over a 30 year period, but thats still $15k…
Seattle is very expensive. Not enough pain has been felt. Homes have become so overpriced, they rather keep homes empty thinking they will always sell it at a win. Price cuts are mostly only occurring to multi million dollars homes
Michael. Thanks for the videos. I watch them all. I enjoy hearing your observations on the housing market. For a long time I wanted to move from cold Indiana to Florida. Because I never pulled the trigger when I was younger when prices were a lot less I missed out and now just enjoy visiting about 3 times a year. I think a course on housing would be great. I would probably take that course just to improve my knowledge. I don't expect that I will be moving from my Indiana lake home at 70 years old but as you say life sometimes changes. Take care and thank you!
Do not move to Florida. The summer weather is hell, and the humidity will create a lot of rheumatoid conditions. I am moving out fir many reasons, and one is the health, and politics.
Michael, Concerning the vacant home purchased for 12.5million in 2021, 240K in property taxes and asking 50K rent There are obscenely wealthy individuals in the world. Used to be known as robber barons in 1800's. Unlimited funds available, We cannot comprehend their lives. Probably don't even notice the loss. Just a tax deduction. We have entered the age of robber barons again.
You are right Michael , they really 😮thought just because they have lower mortgages that they will make a profit on renting. Unfortunately New York is the only place that someone can profit from renting. Florida is also a disaster when comes to make a profit.
I've been very fortunate and have only purchased real estate at the bottom of the markets. Last time I purchased was in 2011 at the bottom of the market. I purchased to places at the same time. I'm thinking that 2025 will be a banner year to purchase again because I believe that a major crash will happen this year. Actually, I thought that the crash would have already happened by now in a major way but it hasn't happened just yet. All the indicators have shown that it's prime to happen any day now. Actually, I did end up purchasing my neighbors place at the county court house steps for 80k about six years ago. I sold it two months latter after I did a little clean up on it and staged it for sale for 440k two months latter. Now that place is worth about 750. My place is worth about 1.5 and I purchased it for 87k but had to put in about 250 into it because it was really trashed.
I bought my home in 2016 for $602k. The had a 3% interest rate. I sold 5 months ago for $1.3M with multiple offers. I am sitting in a rental house for $4K a month. I plan to repurchase a substantially similar house to what I sold for $700K in a year or two for cash. Giving up the 3% interest rate wasn’t difficult to do when my plan is to pay cash for the next house…. And if interest rates were to go to 20% it only means my next house will be cheaper as most people buy on payment vs. price.
I bought my house back in 2016 at 4%. A couple weeks ago my mortgage lender sent me a letter telling me all about a fantastic opportunity to do a cash out refinance. Sounded great until I read the fine print: almost 9% for the new rate. No thanks. I'll stick with what I have.
Exactly. Sold my house for 700k. Instead of buying my new home outright, I put 100,000 down at 3 1/2% and the rest went into treasury bills. I know it might not last forever, but I was able to retire at 60 instead of 62. The interest pays every expense. Right down to dog washes and my 600 K is still there
That is a great story and example to prove your point. A couple things i want to say is why did he buy a house in Seattle and complaining about the weather? I hope he doesn't think about moving to FL because we are full and we need less demand so prices continue to drop like they are currently doing. And his salary is very rare, but what is more rare is the fact he can move wherever he wants and still make that salary. You dont usually make that kind of money with a remote job. I know because I'm an aerospace engineer with a remote work from home job. So this story is the extreme case, and most other people will be in a much worse situation. People WILL be giving up those golden handcuffs and then trying to find a house that is overpriced by delusional house owners.
I am a tax and financial planner. The issue has many complicated issues. Tax planning, risk management, estate planning are just a few. Heat a good CPA and real estate attorney to go over your options before you just rent it out.
I agree it's good to avoid an excessive mortgage as a general principle. But many do by falsely assuming that if they buy in a mid to higher end of town their value will not decline. In fact such properties can show the highest volatility. Rather, it's important to take into account the possible downsides like being able to lease out your property. OK. Easy to say. Because the uncertainties involved are daunting when tying to plan years into the future. With the best will in the world you can still make the wrong decision. Economists cannot even agree on what's happening in the next few months let alone years. This thinking encourages self-blame when in fact the ordinary punter is disadvantaged pretty continuously. For instance if the bottom falls out of the employment market then the ability to pay rent on higher-end properties reduces. Because it's discretionary so people start renting the lower end properties because they're trying to save to pay down debt and prepare in case of their own redundancy. If everyone is fearful at the same time then all your figures from when you first took out the mortgage become quite upset, even with the best planning. Because the reality is that what triggers the market is not widely understood and then when it happens is also not well known. If the Seattle guy delays he could be in for even greater losses. It's a wonder he doesn't just sell out now instead of waiting for the market to really start to collapse. Paralysis by analysis. Not good.
Yes, Mike! Me and my mom (still don’t know if this year or next) want to buy a home, so I think a course on purchasing real estate would be great to clear up some things.
Renting a house is not that difficult,I'm renting a house in Florida and I been living in the Philippines almost a year now . Just gotta be smart people
Fine... IF you have good renters who pay rent on time and don't trash your property. There are cases here in Colorado where renters stopped paying, and they didn't get evicted for over a year. The cops won't help you.
@@jeffw1267if course the cops won't help you, it's a civil matter. Know the laws and hire an attorney, or better yet, read. Evictions are a process, not impossible at all.
It's hard for me to wrap my head around that $13 mill property listing. They were asking $65k/mo rent, then dropped it to $50k. Wow, what a bargain! smh. That's more than I paid for my first house. And a $240k annual property tax bill. omg. What were people thinking?
I recently got a quote for my homeowners ins from my current company, State Farm (condo in MO) if I decided to rent it out. It’s cheaper than if I live here. Yea, I thought that was weird, but it’s true.
I think if you're buying another then you may be getting a multi discount like vehicles. Only reason I keep a non running Jeep. Insured for storage for 80 a year but makes my auto insurance altogether cheaper. I could add a nonworking motorcycle and probably save more.😂
At current interest rates, I'd have to pay 1.5-2X more to buy the same house as I pay to rent it now. That just doesn't make sense. I'll wait until those two price tags get closer together.
Bought a house in Canada and never got below a 7% mortgage but after forty years it is worth a lot more than we paid for it and it has been paid for over twenty years ago. Now doing some upgrades and repairs every year to make it more suitable for an aging couple and maybe in ten years we will sell and rent an apartment. Our taxes and insurance are a lot less than in Florida and we went to Florida every winter for a couple months for the last eleven years but now think prices have gone too high down there.
Peter Schiff explained this about 2-months ago, that the most valuable asset these homeowners have right now is their mortgage. He said a lot of people are going to want to stay in those homes, even if the home price goes down, their mortgage is so low, it still will be cheaper than selling it and moving somewhere with a lower loan, but the interest rate with go way up between 8%-10%. Because right now these homeowners have something that no longer exists: 2-4% interest rates. Those days aren’t returning. So they’re mortgage payments are *cheaper* right now than if they sold it. Even renting is higher than their 2-4% mortgage payment. It’s golden. If you sell that 2-4% interest rate mortgage for a smaller loan at 8-10%, your payment will GO UP. So, he concluded, you gotta live somewhere and you gotta PAY to live somewhere, might as well STAY in that LOW interest rate mortgage that nobody else can get now. That nonexistent low interest rate is an ASSET💰 because it’s saving you money.
I don’t know it’s called shortage because SW Florida so many homes for sale! I sold my house I would like to move Sarasota or Charlotte county they have plenty homes for sale . Only big problem lots of houses really old and needs lots of work . They asking for $325-$400k it’s crazy they trying to sell for over 140+ days! Most sellers agents are rude owners are greedy .
At a $400k income a year the house is more a tax shelter than a source of income. Just in federal taxes thay are saving atleast $8k a year not accounting for all of the deductions that rental property offers.
I'm 18 minutes into this video and you just were talking about a 13,500,000 dollar house for rent for 50,000 / month. I remember back in 2008 we lived in a waterfront community and a lot of the houses were being purchased by a certain ethnic group (foreign) with questionable access to money. It was almost laughable but of course the realtors had no problem with what was going on. I wonder if this isn't what is going on when you show listings such as this.
There is for sure some money parking going on. Not all of it is illegal, some of it is just people who live in sketchy South American countries that want to own American assets to protect their wealth.
Refinancing is expensive. They will roll most of the cost into the new mortgage but it puts you more in the hole and diminishes the benefit of a lower rate.
Most of the people with the low mortgage rates are happy about their situation. Most of these videos don’t talk about the success stories and have encouraged people to wait and not buy. 2020-2022 was the last chance to buy at an affordable rate. I know someone who had the down payment and the income to buy in 2020. They decided to wait for a crash. Now they’re priced out. They have gave up on the idea of buying.
That's on them that they gave up. Unemployment is about to skyrocket, not to mention that Baby Boomers are starting to pass. Once the Boomers start passing more, there will be a glut of inventory, even without a rise in unemployment.
2024 The Year of the RETAIL APOCALYPSE th-cam.com/video/TNmttqX9WSk/w-d-xo.html
yes, please do a course
Sounds better than my parents basement
It's already happening.
I'm not going to buy a house in Florida, actually I don't even live in the US. I just like to watch these beautiful neighborhoods and dream living there some day.
146K views 4 days ago and JUST 125k subscribers
I paid up all my mortgages in 2yrs while working with a Financial Adviser. I’m 60 and my husband 64 we are both retired with over $3 million in net worth and no debts. We got to realize that the secret to financial freedom is making better investments.
If anything, the situation will worsen. Affordable housing will soon become unaffordable. Therefore, I advise taking action now, as today's prices will seem low compared to the future. Until the Fed takes more stringent measures, I anticipate widespread hysteria due to rampant inflation. You can't remove the band-aid halfway.
Home prices will come down eventually, but for now; get your money (as much as you can) out of the housing market and get into the financial markets or gold. The new mortgage rates are crazy, add to that the recession and the fact that mortgage guidelines are getting more difficult. Home prices will need to fall by a minimum of 40% (more like 50%) before the market normalizes. If you are in cross roads or need sincere advise on the best moves to take now its best you seek an independent advisor who knows about the financial markets.
I will be happy getting assistance and glad to get the help of one, but just how can one spot a reputable one?
There are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Sophia Maurine Lanting” for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She’s quite known in her field, look her up.
I copied her whole name and pasted it into my browser; her website appeared immediately, and her qualifications are excellent; thank you for sharing.
Keep in mind that during the 80’s people were encouraged to save due to the interest rates. Right now there’s very little incentive to save because those who are saving are watching those who are reckless taking it in. I’ve been trying to save for a home and it’s been discouraging to watch prices continue to not budge because there’s people willing to get into a mortgage where they’re paying 40% of their income. It’s insane.
I advise you to invest in stocks to balance out your real estate, Even the worst recessions offer wonderful buying opportunities in the markets if you're cautious. Volatility can also result in excellent short-term buy and sell opportunities. This is not financial advice, but buy now because cash is definitely not king right now!
You're correct! With the help of an investment coach, I was able to diversify my 250K portfolio across markets and produce slightly more than $730K in net profit from high dividend yield equities, ETFs, and bonds.
@@mariaguerrero08That's impressive! How can I reach this person?
Credits to "Gertrude Margaret Quinto", she maintains an online presence. Just make a simple search for her name online.
I just googled her name and her website came up right away. It looks interesting so far. I'm going to book a call with her and let you know how it goes. Thanks
My dad hated going to work every day of his life, but he called his job the "golden handcuffs". It was too late to switch jobs because he had a family to support and a pension he would need later on.
What is a pension? I've never heard of that.
So, what did he do?
I feel so sad for people like your dad. He is a good man, but doing a job you hate is a cruel form of torture
@@the_derplerit's a mutual fund thing that everyone in your company contributes too while working, and then when u retire u get fixed income so u don't have to work
Your example is the usual one for “golden handcuffs”. I have never heard that term applied to mortgages…
The mistake wasn’t figuring out rental/mortgage payment ratios. The problem was that people paid waaaaaaay too much for housing.
That part!👏
This the one ☝️
Equity?
@@marknewton6984property appreciates and buildings depreciate. Land is a good investment and houses aren't.
I sold my va 2.25 rate assumed. Didn’t want to live there anymore. Home went up about 250k in two years. Sold it bought a home cash where we wanted to be half the size, new, way better neighborhood. I’m 60 but felt trapped with the 2.25. I wasn’t gonna let my rate own me. I don’t live to be entrapped in a rate. I took the gift of ridiculous price increases and didn’t get greedy. Now I’m mortgage free, live down the street from my family and much happier.
Smart!
Yeah that makes sense you got the best rate of all it's not like you were assuming a 7% mortgage after selling. They usually just call that downsizing and a lot people would jump on something like that if it worked out for them.
@@jizzyjake6783 yeah it was still tough we really wanted a house the same size but after seeing people at our workplaces getting canned, called back into work and just the craziness and uncertainty out there figured who needs the stress and we will live to fight another day on our terms. Options and control of your life make you rich not how much you make. Took a while to figure that out.
I'm in a similar situation but I bought 17 years ago and my home has only appreciated by about 10k in 17 years.
You're lucky you earned 250k by doing nothing - I'm not sure if "trapped" is the correct word.
A year after I bought my home in 2007 it's value collapsed by 50%
@Matt90541 Who in their right mind would have ever bought a house in 2007?
Mortgage rates are currently at an all time high since 2000(24 years) and based on statistics on inflation, we might see that number skyrocket further, a 30-year fixed rate was only 5% this time last year, so do I just keep waiting for a housing crash before buying or redirect my focus to the equity market
The stock market is no different, to maintain profit, you need to have some in-depth knowledge on the market
True, I mostly just buy and hold stocks, but my portfolio has been mostly in the red for quite awhile now. Unfortunately to be able to make good gains, you’ll need to be consistent and restructure your portfolio frequently.
in my opinion, it was much easier investing back in the 60s but it’s a lot trickier now, those making consistent profit in these times are professionals reason I’ve been using an advisor for the past 5 years to consistently build my portfolio in preparations for retirement.
my partner’s been considering going the same route, could you share more info please on the advisor that guides you.
My CFA ’Melissa Terri Swayne’ , a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
We have a 2.25% 30 yr mortgage and plan on staying in home for at least next 15 years. We are retired and loving life.
$5,500 a month is BEYOND outrageous. It's like the boiling frog syndrome: people don't know that their lives are out of control until it's too late. It boggles the mind how expensive real estate is now. Housing is not worth what people are paying for it. It's going to crash. Soon. No one can sustain these insane prices.
Best position is to own a house outright in a low property tax area.
Not sure if it's possible, but might be good for purchase agreements to include aftershock clauses. Allow people back out when taxes and/or insurance add far more than expected to the monthly cost of the house. Seems like Floridians could benefit where insurance rates are going crazy.
@bigbob3772 that's why I stayed put 1700 a year for taxs in CA is affordable
The "Boiling Frog Syndrome" was a perfect way to phrase that. 👍
If it does they'll just print another 10 trillion to hand out to themselves to buy up all the good deals again
I got a 2.25% rate back in 2021. Gave it up because we needed to move AND HOA started to not allow renters. Hard pill to swallow!
Wow, thanks for sharing that!
"We" got rid of non resident board member attempting to "rule" and rent , not the ability to rent..perhaps the information you get "from" "association" is from saboteurs and looters or outside "help"...
HOA community. Big mistake
Never HOA.
It Gets filtered out instantly.
@@gregorylyon1004 I agree. A mistake I will NEVER make again.
Paid cash for my house 26 years ago. Apparently I am content with what I have and where I live.
Thank God I'm not dealing with having to put a roof over my head, renting/buying, in this screwed up economy.
🙏🙏🙏
I regret so much going to the kindergarten instead of buying houses 😭
with inflation your property value will go up and so will your property taxes, insurance, and cost of repairs.
The one thing that leaped out at me when I was working as a long haul driver was; I have no favorite place to live. Strange but true.
I can't even imagine being locked into a long term ANYTHING at $5.5k/mo.
That sounds like death to me.
Mortgage=death note. Mort means death in French.
@@thephilosophicalpugilist
I'm aware of that, thanks again for your input for those who aren't. It just doesn't sound like a proper use of money if you can literally dump that much cash each month.
@@socialisttrafficregulator2015 I agree! $60,000 a year for a house! I'd rather save the money and by a mobile home for $60,000!
Yes that is what it is and with predication and with the government not paying attention it will get worst, so that why one do need a backup plan to save him/herself
@@gsssbsbjdkfdmjd That's very true of you, but what backup plan could be considered and what gives you the courage to say that the situation won't be worse in the future?
Refinanced 11 1/2 years ago got 3.25, just paid off mortgage in November 2023, loving life.❤
My rental property had a 3% mortgage. I was able to make a small profit on it for two years. Then the insurance doubled and I wasn't confident I could keep the rent competitive and break even let alone make a profit. So I sold it while I knew there was still some value.
You will always be competing as a small guppy in a large lake. People who are happy with 3% returns or less, etc. Or they can even lose money for a year. If there are enough renters, fine.
Insurance is going to be what breaks the Florida market.
@@commanderrussels2612 I agree 100%.
Florida home prices are beyond crazy. We wanted to move a year ago to Sarasota area from Boston area. I went there to look around at real estate for 3 days. The traffic and the prices shocked me, also all the extra HOA fees (100-800$a month) crazy property tax and amount of older homes in need of fixing. Decided not to move - Boston area houses are cheaper - Surprise! Have to suffer here for several more years.
@@rumpointcondo3339 on the flip side, my house in St Pete would sell for about $750k. No HOA. On the water. I'm sure you could afford that coming from Boston ... 65 degrees right now... Not a hint of ❄️.
As a result of Divorce, in Aug 23 - I gave up a 30yr fixed 2.875% mortgage in Georgia. I was on my way to Florida - but changed my mind based on the education of videos like Michael. I am cash rich and house poor....and enjoying the fuck out of it!
First time buyers should watch this to avoid expensive mistakes
Agreed
It should be part of your future Home Educational package ; part of a series you create. You relay the info clearly and skip the schwag...TY
Just sold our house today. We had 2.4%, and I don't regret it at all. What we saved in interest rates, we were dumping out the window in property tax increase.
Gonna rent for a while and hope for a crash, or maybe just build a house with my bare hands. Something has got to give with this insanity.
Smart, I see a housing crash as inevitable.
but won't you pay property taxes on the home you build with your bare hands too?
We could easily have a flat housing market for years as rates come down due to soft landing and support the housing market. Your sell/rent gamble might blow up in your face.
Something is gonna give… but most people aren’t prepared for it and a lot of people aren’t gonna make it
@@midsummernightsdream60 different location, very different taxes
Great analysis and advice Michael, We escaped the real estate insanity of Florida and moved to the Philippines in 2022. We are raising our two young children here and our quality of life and happiness far exceeds what we experienced anywhere we ever lived in the usa, I am 70 years old... I applied for Philippine Permanent Residency here and in six months my residency will be complete, we really thought outside the box on this one! God Bless all who are suffering and stressed out in the states...John
You say that you are raising your 2 young children in the Philippines???? And you are 70 YEARS OLD???? How young is your wife ????? Lol
Why not Guam?
I plan to retire there in 15 years, health permitting. My wife was born there and has family there. I’ve visited about 6 times. It’s a lovely place!
@@gregorylyon1004😂😂 dirty dog
@@gregorylyon1004he has his own channel . Nice guy. I do watch him almost every Sunday.
I do belief in the Philippines you can live down to earth with less baggage .
His apartment is small compare to American standard, but he did make it his own which would be unthinkable in The USA or Canada .
After the crash of 1987, every house I rented for the next 14 years was less than the owners’ mortgage payments. All of them took a “loss” until they sold the property.
Not trying to troll, just curious how you came to this conclusion...
In 14 years, you effectively paid off half of their mortgage balance. Plus, they reaped the tax benefits which probably netted them another 30%. Then the appreciation, which was on average 70% nationally from 1987-2001. So, how did they lose?
@@ComicLover-oj5svobviously, many areas of the country did not see property values rise as quickly as a few areas… and this persisted for most of the 1980’s…
@@ComicLover-oj5svpublic records stooge. You can see everything about the house you're renting. Follow along! Lol
@@Defundthemasons You're not being clear. What you are saying is that it was just a paper loss that was not realised because they didn't sell. Rather, they held on and waited for the market to improve and then sold well into profit. So the only 'loss' was that they picked up the tab on the difference between the rental income and the mortgage. This is not unheard of.
@@Defundthemasons If you think poor self expression is living outside the Matrix, stay there. You have no idea how to put yourself in the reader's shoes and actually communicate outside of your own headset.
You should do a top 10 list of what buyers miss in there due diligence, for example, inspections, dot plans if any, hoa rules, irrigation water rates, family watchdog, crime maps, loan prepayment penalty, new property tax rate, neighbors yard encroachment, sewer line rotted or full of roots, pool leak, etc etc
great idea
One surprisingly common one is simply not making a full comparison of owning costs to renting costs.
Their buddy who’s a used house salesman was always going on and on about how renting is throwing money away, so they bought and then realized that mortgage interest is throwing money away, property tax is throwing money away, home insurance is throwing money away, HOA fees are throwing money away, and property upkeep is throwing money away.
If you buy because rent money is money out the door that doesn’t increase your net worth, then do a proper comparison to all the money out he door that doesn’t increase your net worth if you are an owner. Additionally, in terms of appreciation, take into account the fact that there’s a high likelihood that your would-be-down-payment-money could make more money in other investment classes than it’s likely to right now in real estate.
@littledebby365 You should have a channel/do videos also. Cover Florida first and foremost.....it's the hottest mkt.....for years now.
our muni doesn't collect enough taxes for snow plowing, so you've gotta basically get up and dig with your neighbors til you hit a plowed road
ask around where you're looking about quirks of the town etc
@@appalachiabrauchfrau doesn’t collect enough to plow snow?
I’m guessing it’s a conservative area?
People need boltcutters. They need a plan that is much bigger than "how to buy a house" and afford it for a while. Inflation, taxes and insurance are what is going up and up, not RE itself. And commercial RE? A disaster. Auto loan delinquencies? Disaster. We are headed for a crack up.
Gave up a 2021 rate of 2.6. Developer lied about hundreds of section 8 apartments to be built next door. HOA rates went up 10% every year while we were there. Crime was absolutely abysmal. Assessed tax value went up $100k in only 2 years. It was a bad scenario. Obviously have a much higher rate now and things are tighter but we are in a much safer/better location and we are not in an HOA or in city limits.
The last condo I had in Florida even though I loved the place, the deciding factor in what prompted me to sell was when I saw the housing market slow down last time I went on the county property appraiser and tax collectors website and I looked up every unit in my building to see their purchase price. Sadly it turned out that I I paid the highest price than any other unit in the entire building. by approximately $60,000. Knowing that any of my neighbors could undercut me at any moment I decided to sell. You learn through experience. I wish I had known to look at the county website before I purchased. That unit got foreclosed on a year after I sold it and sat empty for 5 years.
If you’re moving with your job transfer and you own multiple pets, you NEED to buy a house. No one will rent to you if you have 3 dogs and 4 cats.
What if you offer them a very Steep Security Deposit?
@@justinallport9789 well, it’s history now. I’m in a house but in this city’s cranky housing market I can’t even imagine a landlord accepting my animal menagerie that included 2 pitbulls. Liability disaster!
Make sure you check city ordinances. The current city I'm in only allows 5 total (cat/dog) pets.
Thanks Michael for giving people a realistic view of being a landlord. It indeed can be a nightmare. My father owned some properties when I was younger and I saw firsthand the challenges and never wanted to pursue that task.
I don't know how anyone can think these home prices are acceptable. Prices in the Sunbelt are due for a correction with most of the non-local buyers pretty much done. Its the locLs now and they can't afford these ridiculous prices.
I feel the same way. There are OLD ugly homes in my area going for 600k and up that will need a LOT of work in the coming years. These homes are worth around 300k. It's absolutely ridiculous, and the people buying these pieces of junk at top dollar are going to really, really regret it.
If you are not owner occupying, you lose homestead exemption and your tax base is no longer limited to 3% increase in Florida. Your base will be market rate. Also, rental homes have higher insurance rates than owner occupied homes. Add those costs on too @Michael
Owning a house is a illusion now as property taxes eats away your life.
Wow! What are you talking about? If you don't ever buy a house when you retire you will have to pay rent to someone and that is an expense that will cut into your retirement! I'm 10 years away from paying off my mortgage and 10 years away from retirement. All the while I've deducted the interest off my taxes. Do the math!
@@fozzir I'm not going to retire and I didn't do your math obviously.
@@hampopper3150 Well then I'm proud of you!
Oh my GOSH Michael 😮.
Another thousand subscribers. I’m very excited for you. You have got to be the fastest growing channel regarding Real Estate. You’re DEFINITELY CRUSHING IT 😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
Blessings,Carlos ✝️🙏❤️😊🇺🇸
And nobody never thinks about the dirty money laundering happening for years on those properties. They don’t care if those stays empty and if they overpaid : money has been washed.
I think what's crazy is that people don't understand that interest rates really don't matter because you have to factor in the cost of everything. The government can increase or lower the interest rates but that does not change the price of homes or the cost of food or anything else that you have to buy with a currency that is going down more and more in the buying power basically we're going to be like Zimbabwe eventually. Cash is getting hard to come by nowadays and everything is getting digital which means that the government can control and watch what you do and that impacts how they can dictate the prices of everything which then makes you a debt slave because you have to take out more and more debt to acquire these goods. For example just like a mortgage for buying a home you are not buying a home you were buying the debt to acquire that home and basically it is a very expensive rent-to-own program which for 30 years you're paying into and the government can screw you over by impacting everything else around you and let's say that you pay off the home early it doesn't matter because our money literally does not have any value in it, it's not backed by gold and people accept that because that's how the government controls you is by lending you money that they will always be able to adjust to make your behavior what they want. So enclosing your own nothing and be happy because the currency will never be enough to survive but you'll have just enough to make it through the end of the month. Stop playing in today's game get out of the housing market buy some land and do it like your forefathers did that's the only way that you're going to get your freedom is by being the master of your life everyday and you are rich because you have nothing that dictates or control you.
It is about EQ to stay delay granitation. People who rush buying an overpriced houses has been influenced by realters and coporate media.
We got a 2 year 2.09% mortgage in Canada which comes due in March 2024 at which time we will pay it off and be mortgage free during retirement. It will just let me sleep at night knowing that interest rates can go back to 20% (like in the 1980s) and I will not loose the house.
Congrats, a wise thing to do. I know Americans are not in favour of paying of there house because the can deduct the interest on there income tax.
We live in Calgary and paid our house of with in 10 years . Living an excellent life without loosing any sleep . Happy retirement. A good place to be.
Yes, best and only smart way to retire. Debt free!
I never understood those short loans Canada has.10 years or 30 down the road you might not be able to afford your house and what if you don't qualify anymore do they kick you out on the street.
Never get emotional about a piece of real estate. You will probably make a bad decision buy usually pay too much. Always be able to say no and walk.
HA, yes "the golden handcuffs" is actually a phrase that refers to a state of entrapment due to a good benefit that holds someone from change - a "golden" benefit like your interest rate scenario. My aunt was a teacher and after many years said I have to keep going because of the golden handcuffs - the pension after 30 years. She made it! Without the benefit, she probably would've resigned sooner.
Police and fire department jobs around here, guys are bailing after 5-10 years when there is no pension plan involved. They move on to a different department that still offers or get into a different line of work.
Not all of us just have a house, we have homes acreage, farms, animals all of that and when those big properties were bought at 2.3 like mine we are not stuck due to income reasons we are stuck because others don't qualify to buy
I think owning a laundromat or self storage facility would be a good investment. Having done neither, I'm just throwing that out there.
Little mailbox center. No storage building rats, no repairing, switching out machines, etc.
We own a carwash in npr. We do ok
I speak from personal experience from the time I was in my 20s to my 40s, interest rates didn't matter to me. Getting the loan did. I'd pay anything to get a car. All I saw was the bottom line. When I started buying properties, I got them at such a low price. When I sold, I made money. And here's the most important thing. When I took a loan out, it was always short-term with a complete payoff from another property sold. I used banks to my advantage. I've never had a mortgage for more than a year. I own 4 now and am completely debt free.
Michael, you should have a course and charge for it. You may as well get paid for the information you are giving away freely. You have the charisma to be a great teacher!!
Yes, a book, course, or video would be great. You are the most honest real estate person on TH-cam!
We have golden handcuffs right now. My mortgage is so cheap compared to others around me. Good thing we are not looking to move anytime soon. My wife and I both work less than a mile up the road from our house. We’re here for the foreseeable future. But one never knows… Have a great night everyone 🍻
Great move and don’t let it go. Enjoy the low mortgage and freedom. Lots People who waited for a crash thinking they were going to get a foreclosure are stuck renting and are depressed about it. I know someone who did exactly that and gave up on homeownership.
Yes, $3,500 a month is high, plus maintenance fees, taxes, etc. Bought an over valued home
8 out of 10 contacts bought 2-3 homes in naples dec '22. all renovated and listed for 700-800k (size: 1000-1200 sf). they tried renting between 9k-10k, no one renting and no buyers. these homes started listing sept-oct '23. at the moment, total homes they have on naples market is 112. 112 homes!
Waited to get my first house when I could straight buy it out- also gave me time to see if I wanted to stay in the area and where in the area I liked. After that I was free to do what I wanted with my money as far a future properties (was in a stable place I liked, and no questions about my house). I see a huge renting boom since these house prices are out of control and rates not pleasant either. I see many people taking losses- already see it Austin and Houston.
texistan insurance greedflation exploitation is insanely out of control, just as bad as the property tax. The moving goal posts of the financial enslavers ensures everyone trapped in the US eventually gets pulled under.
@@herlegz6969they are all out to get you
When it came to making the largest purchase in my entire life, I wanted to know everything and anything in the ins and outs before I even considered purchasing my house. I just assumed that everyone was like that I didn't realize so many people took it so nonchalantly. The fact that this will be the second time this has happened in the last like 12 years it wouldn't hurt to come up with a course.
People are desperate. By the time you figure out all the ins and outs the place is gone.
You should definitely put on a real estate for beginners video. As an older guy, im always amazed how many folks cannot calculate their total income vs total expenses and what percentages should go to what and often more importantly what is the value of certain purchases. Love your common sense content!
A Video from Michael is the perfect way to start the weekend!😊
Right on!!
FOMO is a childhood disease that most people have to go through at least once.
Line always go up
People are now going to have to stop using the “rent prices never fall” argument. in many cities, at least. I guess in some places rent isn’t down
My co worker had the same discussion with his wife. She was mentioning how much their homes value grew and that they could sell it and make a huge profit. He then says "oh yeah? Where are we gonna go? Everything is overpriced, and we'll just end up paying more anyway."
Women…they don’t see the big picture
Leave the country, obviously. There's nowhere to go here.
Move to Mississippi you can still buy a place for 65.000
Are you ready for ragnarok? Your house will be tinder and your money toilet paper
Miami Lakes went to see 3 houses for rent. I offered $700 less than rental price. I was denied right away. One week later bingo a homeowner gave in. Start offering less. $4500 for $3800.
My friend gave up his 2.5% in favor for a new state, in a way better neighborhood, in a way newer home. Even at 5.5% they pay less and are finally in a safe city.
It wasnt that he was struggling with finances, it was the all the bad kids terrorizing the neighborhood while their dead beat parents did nothing about it. On top of that the violence and crime got out of control with all the Californian's moving into town.
He made a good choice amd im glad it wasnt because of finance, just personal saftey.
So not everyome giving up the low rates is because of financial problems.
I live in Seattle area and the rent vs home values equation is way out of whack here. Unless you put 50% or more down, you are likely going to have a house that costs more than it can rent. It’s been like this for at least 8 years and it’s getting worse.
still cash flowing in my city in British Columbia even tho prices doubled in past 10 years
@@DummMoney-rr1fi That’s really lucky. I noticed here in the Seattle metro, the more expensive cities are the worst, such as Bellevue where you would need to spend about $2 million for a decent house and it’s only worth $4-5k a month rent. A $700k house further north can rent for around $3k. Really odd dynamic.
Houses really work well over the long haul. Think 10 years increments. I took the view that the rental just needed to break even. I did not need the income. Then over 15 years the renter pays off your mortgage. So, it turns into income when you need it in retirement. Also works well as an inflation hedge. Patience required.
So over about 24 years I ended up with two great rental properties that the renters essentially bought for me. I would definitely not buy a house now.
And now that many rentals are cash flow negative in some cities, investor buyer demand is way down there.
@@SigFigNewtongetting closer to being a great time to buy. Buy when no one wants one and it’s seen as a terrible investment.
@@JS-ny9ge we’re nowhere near it being seen as a terrible investment. Closer to peak FOMO than to that still
yes! Agree!
I think the sad thing is that this doesn't really apply to housing anymore it's also applies to everything that you want to get from auto loans to bank loans to anything that's tied to a contract that is impacted by the government raising or lowering hikes on the interest. I know that corporations have a say on what they will put down on interest on the monthly payments but this is just too much literally the prices of everything is going up. Even if interest on payments does come down, people do not understand that it doesn't matter what kind of interest you have. If you're literally buying a house for over half a million dollars even at a 2% interest that's still a lot of money to put down every month on something that you are literally renting to own. The only good thing about a mortgage is that this contract allows you to sell the home and recap the money back if you're able to make a profit. But if not right now, you're taking a loss so either way you're just pushing your debt around in a market that's already falling down. This in return makes everyone's homes go down in value which tanks the market and then eventually with all that weight it will come crashing down. The seller then realize that the debt to profit ratio is too big. And with the way that everything is going on I would be surprised if that lump sum of money is only able be survived on with a very restrictive and conservative and minimalist life style you'll eventually own nothing and be happy.
I know someone that has a mortgage of 2% in NYC. His Mortgage is about $2,100 a month. Yet he rents his entire house for $5,500 a Month. He does have to cover the water and heat which is about another $600 a month. So Total he has to pay out of pocket $2700 leaving him with a Profit of $2800 Not bad?
People in Florida are buying homes for Half a million but can't get enough to cover the Mortgage because people out here don't make as much money as New Yorkers. Yet New Yorkers come here and buy the houses cash because of the equity they made from selling there homes in NY, Which still make no sense because if they want to leave one day, they will never be able to rent it to Cover a home else where if they choose to rent it out and move again.
Houses in Florida are old and need lots of work and people are asking Ridiculous prices. Florida is either going to have to drop there prices or it will bust. Not even New Yorkers want to move here at these prices. Most new homes are also Garbage in Florida. Match Stick homes is what I call them. Thank god insurance companies are requiring some builders to make the bottom part of the home out of Cement Block.
The Real Estate Market is on Fire it it will Burn.
If you’re not first. You’re last ricky bobby.
In first and last😊
Ricky Bobby? What does that mean?
@@BREEZYM6015Ricky Bobby is the character in the movie Talladega Nghts.
Shake and Bake😊
Baby Jesus😅
Low mortgage rates allow for high home prices and high mortgage rates require lower home prices - generally speaking over time.
Nothing is more stressful than having to move and you cannot sell your place. When the rent does not cover the payments it takes integrity and realizing your error to hang in there until the situation turns around. My Husband and I had that situation when my Husband was in the military. He was transferred, and no matter what we tried to do, we could not sell our place. It took us NINE years to dig ourselves out of that situation. In fact we still have the property. It’s nice that the place is paid off, and we have been turning a profit, but it was bleak to slog it out.
NO! If you start a course it will corrupt you. Stay true to yourself and what you are doing.
If you rent and dont stuff cash like you owned, you will fall behind. Those that buy are often forced to be that saver, built in as equity.
Not realizing or changing your lifestyle is the culprit, if you rent.
💯
They're really not losing $300 per month if they rent at $3500. They're gaining much more in equity with each payment. The gamble is getting good renters and whether or not it keeps it's value.
That is one way to look at it however, Seattle is a declining market so they could start losing equity as things continue to move the other way
In an increasing market, yes you build equity. However, prices are going down so no equity building. If there is a major repair, all profits are gone.
Your correct, I have heard some horror stories, when it comes to renters trashing the house"
Equity is down in Seattle about 10% from its peak almost 2 years ago. The equity is not always guaranteed in the short term but generally, you are correct.
There was a time when equity growing by paying the mortgage each month was considerable. A $360k house if paid off in 15 years is $2k per month of average equity growth. $2k is the actual equity growth in year 8 or 9 of a 15 year mortgage on $360k. Appreciation is a bonus if it happens. I'm in year 9 of a 15 year 3.25% mortgage, so 85% of the P&I is P. I realize that many may not see or have patience for this real estate ownership advantage that starts slowly but snowballs eventually. I guess $2k a month is peanuts these days.
A rental in Seattle or most blue states is a potential landlord's disaster so I wouldn't do that. My landlord friend in MD is selling everything because of the laws being ridiculous and punishing landlords severely. Moratoriums, squatters, slow courts, biased judges, ridiculous new codes, lack of policing...
This could be a good time to teach real estate investors as there may be some foreclosure properties available by 2026. I remember listening to cassette tapes on real estate investing back in the 80's when rates were just finally coming down off of being double digits for 7 long years. If the prices drop down 20%, investors may wade in.
You either have to give up the golden hand cuffs or you are up so much that you just wanna cash out and do something else, for example travel, rent, or just move in with someone. Giving up your low rate doesn’t exactly have to be because they have to.
My dad used to say "Champagne taste on a beer budget". So buy some beer and pretend it's champagne.
Or....drink the champagne of beers. Miller High Life
Yas ! Dad's know best
Dad had good taste!
How about some very thoroughly detailed checklists---one for a stand-alone house and one for a condo. Start with the pre-approval process and end with the closing. Include everything in the lists that buyers should consider and do (and NOT do) during the entire process. I think that would be very helpful.
It was as astounding how much money people were casually throwing around outbidding others. I had friends who casually through an extra $15k on their offer because their agent advised it. Sure, $335k Vs $350k is not a huge difference over a 30 year period, but thats still $15k…
Plus 30 years interest on $15k
Seattle is very expensive. Not enough pain has been felt. Homes have become so overpriced, they rather keep homes empty thinking they will always sell it at a win. Price cuts are mostly only occurring to multi million dollars homes
The only thing I wished I had was a larger lot. But I did okay with rate 2.49%
Michael. Thanks for the videos. I watch them all. I enjoy hearing your observations on the housing market. For a long time I wanted to move from cold Indiana to Florida. Because I never pulled the trigger when I was younger when prices were a lot less I missed out and now just enjoy visiting about 3 times a year. I think a course on housing would be great. I would probably take that course just to improve my knowledge. I don't expect that I will be moving from my Indiana lake home at 70 years old but as you say life sometimes changes. Take care and thank you!
Do not move to Florida. The summer weather is hell, and the humidity will create a lot of rheumatoid conditions. I am moving out fir many reasons, and one is the health, and politics.
Michael, Concerning the vacant home purchased for 12.5million in 2021, 240K in property taxes and asking 50K rent There are obscenely wealthy individuals in the world. Used to be known as robber barons in 1800's. Unlimited funds available, We cannot comprehend their lives. Probably don't even notice the loss. Just a tax deduction. We have entered the age of robber barons again.
You are right Michael , they really 😮thought just because they have lower mortgages that they will make a profit on renting. Unfortunately New York is the only place that someone can profit from renting. Florida is also a disaster when comes to make a profit.
Even if u rent at a loss you still gain that equity
I've been very fortunate and have only purchased real estate at the bottom of the markets. Last time I purchased was in 2011 at the bottom of the market. I purchased to places at the same time. I'm thinking that 2025 will be a banner year to purchase again because I believe that a major crash will happen this year. Actually, I thought that the crash would have already happened by now in a major way but it hasn't happened just yet. All the indicators have shown that it's prime to happen any day now. Actually, I did end up purchasing my neighbors place at the county court house steps for 80k about six years ago. I sold it two months latter after I did a little clean up on it and staged it for sale for 440k two months latter. Now that place is worth about 750. My place is worth about 1.5 and I purchased it for 87k but had to put in about 250 into it because it was really trashed.
I bought my home in 2016 for $602k. The had a 3% interest rate. I sold 5 months ago for $1.3M with multiple offers. I am sitting in a rental house for $4K a month. I plan to repurchase a substantially similar house to what I sold for $700K in a year or two for cash. Giving up the 3% interest rate wasn’t difficult to do when my plan is to pay cash for the next house…. And if interest rates were to go to 20% it only means my next house will be cheaper as most people buy on payment vs. price.
Damn.
Yes, a home buying course would be extremely valuable.
I bought my house back in 2016 at 4%. A couple weeks ago my mortgage lender sent me a letter telling me all about a fantastic opportunity to do a cash out refinance. Sounded great until I read the fine print: almost 9% for the new rate. No thanks. I'll stick with what I have.
Don’t forget opportunity cost. They can liquidate and put the proceeds into TBills or TBonds for 4-5%+ with no risk, and no gaps (like in renting).
Exactly. Sold my house for 700k. Instead of buying my new home outright, I put 100,000 down at 3 1/2% and the rest went into treasury bills. I know it might not last forever, but I was able to retire at 60 instead of 62. The interest pays every expense. Right down to dog washes and my 600 K is still there
That is a great story and example to prove your point. A couple things i want to say is why did he buy a house in Seattle and complaining about the weather? I hope he doesn't think about moving to FL because we are full and we need less demand so prices continue to drop like they are currently doing. And his salary is very rare, but what is more rare is the fact he can move wherever he wants and still make that salary. You dont usually make that kind of money with a remote job. I know because I'm an aerospace engineer with a remote work from home job. So this story is the extreme case, and most other people will be in a much worse situation. People WILL be giving up those golden handcuffs and then trying to find a house that is overpriced by delusional house owners.
A good property manager can absorb a lot of those headaches.
I am a tax and financial planner. The issue has many complicated issues. Tax planning, risk management, estate planning are just a few. Heat a good CPA and real estate attorney to go over your options before you just rent it out.
I agree it's good to avoid an excessive mortgage as a general principle. But many do by falsely assuming that if they buy in a mid to higher end of town their value will not decline. In fact such properties can show the highest volatility. Rather, it's important to take into account the possible downsides like being able to lease out your property. OK.
Easy to say. Because the uncertainties involved are daunting when tying to plan years into the future. With the best will in the world you can still make the wrong decision. Economists cannot even agree on what's happening in the next few months let alone years. This thinking encourages self-blame when in fact the ordinary punter is disadvantaged pretty continuously.
For instance if the bottom falls out of the employment market then the ability to pay rent on higher-end properties reduces. Because it's discretionary so people start renting the lower end properties because they're trying to save to pay down debt and prepare in case of their own redundancy. If everyone is fearful at the same time then all your figures from when you first took out the mortgage become quite upset, even with the best planning.
Because the reality is that what triggers the market is not widely understood and then when it happens is also not well known. If the Seattle guy delays he could be in for even greater losses. It's a wonder he doesn't just sell out now instead of waiting for the market to really start to collapse.
Paralysis by analysis. Not good.
Yes, Mike! Me and my mom (still don’t know if this year or next) want to buy a home, so I think a course on purchasing real estate would be great to clear up some things.
Renting a house is not that difficult,I'm renting a house in Florida and I been living in the Philippines almost a year now . Just gotta be smart people
Sometimes you get lucky and sometimes you don't. No matter how good you think the tenants are they can surprise you.
Fine... IF you have good renters who pay rent on time and don't trash your property. There are cases here in Colorado where renters stopped paying, and they didn't get evicted for over a year. The cops won't help you.
@@jeffw1267if course the cops won't help you, it's a civil matter. Know the laws and hire an attorney, or better yet, read. Evictions are a process, not impossible at all.
It's hard for me to wrap my head around that $13 mill property listing. They were asking $65k/mo rent, then dropped it to $50k. Wow, what a bargain! smh. That's more than I paid for my first house. And a $240k annual property tax bill. omg. What were people thinking?
I recently got a quote for my homeowners ins from my current company, State Farm (condo in MO) if I decided to rent it out. It’s cheaper than if I live here. Yea, I thought that was weird, but it’s true.
Yeah, but losing my tax break would cost me $10k per year ....
I think if you're buying another then you may be getting a multi discount like vehicles. Only reason I keep a non running Jeep. Insured for storage for 80 a year but makes my auto insurance altogether cheaper. I could add a nonworking motorcycle and probably save more.😂
YES! We are 49 and looking to sell and then buy our dream home in SW FL, when prices drop. A real estate course would be fantastic!
At current interest rates, I'd have to pay 1.5-2X more to buy the same house as I pay to rent it now. That just doesn't make sense. I'll wait until those two price tags get closer together.
Bought a house in Canada and never got below a 7% mortgage but after forty years it is worth a lot more than we paid for it and it has been paid for over twenty years ago. Now doing some upgrades and repairs every year to make it more suitable for an aging couple and maybe in ten years we will sell and rent an apartment.
Our taxes and insurance are a lot less than in Florida and we went to Florida every winter for a couple months for the last eleven years but now think prices have gone too high down there.
These MLS details are like watching two Trains collide - makes you wanna cover your eyes and your ears up, but you know you better "Turn and run "!
Peter Schiff explained this about 2-months ago, that the most valuable asset these homeowners have right now is their mortgage. He said a lot of people are going to want to stay in those homes, even if the home price goes down, their mortgage is so low, it still will be cheaper than selling it and moving somewhere with a lower loan, but the interest rate with go way up between 8%-10%. Because right now these homeowners have something that no longer exists: 2-4% interest rates. Those days aren’t returning. So they’re mortgage payments are *cheaper* right now than if they sold it. Even renting is higher than their 2-4% mortgage payment. It’s golden.
If you sell that 2-4% interest rate mortgage for a smaller loan at 8-10%, your payment will GO UP. So, he concluded, you gotta live somewhere and you gotta PAY to live somewhere, might as well STAY in that LOW interest rate mortgage that nobody else can get now. That nonexistent low interest rate is an ASSET💰 because it’s saving you money.
Michael is a straight-up dude.
I don’t know it’s called shortage because SW Florida so many homes for sale! I sold my house I would like to move Sarasota or Charlotte county they have plenty homes for sale . Only big problem lots of houses really old and needs lots of work . They asking for $325-$400k it’s crazy they trying to sell for over 140+ days! Most sellers agents are rude owners are greedy .
2.25% here. Problem is the apparently open ended insurance bill. It may eventually force me into one of my fixer rentals which is worth much less.
someone bought our condo in chicago in April 2022. I hope they're OK. I owe everything to Indiana
Lawn home for sale signs are popping up in my area like weeds in a garden recently. Soon to be covered by snow.
wow! I couldn't imagine such an inversion, that you would lose money. good advice! thanks.
At a $400k income a year the house is more a tax shelter than a source of income. Just in federal taxes thay are saving atleast $8k a year not accounting for all of the deductions that rental property offers.
Can you explain in detail exactly how this works, along with a couple of examples with real numbers?
Barbara Corcran and Dave Ramsey-both cheerleaders for the real estate industry
I'm 18 minutes into this video and you just were talking about a 13,500,000 dollar house for rent for 50,000 / month. I remember back in 2008 we lived in a waterfront community and a lot of the houses were being purchased by a certain ethnic group (foreign) with questionable access to money. It was almost laughable but of course the realtors had no problem with what was going on. I wonder if this isn't what is going on when you show listings such as this.
What ethnic group?
Yeah, tell us where to direct our bigotry
middle east or the cartels . Or East Asia countries. China? @@SideMischief
There is for sure some money parking going on. Not all of it is illegal, some of it is just people who live in sketchy South American countries that want to own American assets to protect their wealth.
The Asians are becoming the new Jews.
Refinancing is expensive. They will roll most of the cost into the new mortgage but it puts you more in the hole and diminishes the benefit of a lower rate.
Most of the people with the low mortgage rates are happy about their situation. Most of these videos don’t talk about the success stories and have encouraged people to wait and not buy. 2020-2022 was the last chance to buy at an affordable rate. I know someone who had the down payment and the income to buy in 2020. They decided to wait for a crash. Now they’re priced out. They have gave up on the idea of buying.
That's on them that they gave up. Unemployment is about to skyrocket, not to mention that Baby Boomers are starting to pass. Once the Boomers start passing more, there will be a glut of inventory, even without a rise in unemployment.
yeah how about a video of all the people that have regrets of NOT buying in 2020-2022?
absurd
@@midsummernightsdream60 yup.