2020-01-29 (B)

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I just noticed I mixed up the date for my previous blog which is kinda par on course for the last few months. Seriously thinking I am going to need to get back on medication to at least being able to think.

On another note. Why is it so hard to get a loan??Okay it's 30k but it would help me get out of problems as be 'safe' with it being cheaper after 6 years with buying a home then paying rent rent rent for a home that doesn't conform and leaks?

Lynne

doing F.I.N.E.

Comments

I hear you

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

I agree that in the long run, it's cheaper to buy than rent. I was forced to give up the home I was buying in 1984 because of bankruptcy. I was relegated to renting. While gainfully employed I was able to pay rent reasonably easily. However, having to do so left me with meager disposable income. My savings account was a joke with only a few hundred dollars in it.

As I approached retirement, which I didn't plan well, I took a look at what my retirement budget would look like. Forecasting the raising rental rates. I determined that two years after I retired, I wouldn't be able to afford rent. I hadn't been apposed to buying, it's just with so little disposable income, it was impossible to raise a down payment.

I had determined that I needed to get the most out of Social Security as I could. At the time I started looking at that idea, the maximum draw could be achieve by waiting until age 72 to begin drawing it. However, that was lowered so that no more benefit could be derived by waiting beyond age 70. Having already determined that I'd work until age 72, I began drawing Social Security at 70. That lucky happenstance left me with about $2,000 to spare each month. I simply put it in my savings account. When the date of my retirement approached, I found I had enough to purchase a newer car, not new, but at least in the same century and still come up with a modest down payment. The trick was to find a home whose payments would fit my retirement budget. About a year before the date, I began looking for such a home. In order to find that kind of home I had to look at rural communities. I found a nice double wide manufactured home less than an hours drive from my church and family that fit the bill.

Having stabilized my housing cost, I'm able to live retired.

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt

Got caught in bankruptcy 2.

Got caught in bankruptcy 2. Including losing my home due to to large mortgage payments.

Found a few 'older' places that are borderline liveable in the country that would have payments of about 300/month for under 15 years including some urgent work (new boiler for one). Just can't seem to get a loan for it :(

L

As the old saying goes......

D. Eden's picture

The easiest way to get a loan is to prove that you don’t need it.

Case in point, my current mortgage (which will be paid off in roughly 18 months) was taken out as a tax break more than anything else. I needed the deduction on my income tax, not the money. The money went into the bank and we collect interest on it while making payments against the loan. It is basically a wash - but I also get a significant tax deduction out of it based on the payments and the interest.

Unfortunately, the whole loan system is rigged against those who can most benefit from one.

D. Eden

Dum Vivimus, Vivamus

Bankers

I have many friends who own community banks. Their hands are tied quite tight by government regulations. Being creditworthy has little to do with logical assumptions and a lot to do with politics.

Not too long ago the American dream was home ownership.

Jill

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)