Tag Archives: property taxes

Less Home, More Wealth

You’ve got to work to succeed. – Owner of a Lonely Heart Song and Lyrics by Yes

If you crisscross the country, you will see home prices are highly inflated. Homes values have gone up, but so too have prices.

I look to my left and to my right, but I don’t really see any new starter homes being built.

How is a family just starting out supposed to find affordable housing without any affordable homes?

You need to keep your fixed expenses low, so that you can keep more of your money in your pocket.

Remember the future is more expensive. Things do not go down in price. Prices go up.

I urge you to reconsider purchasing anything that will mean paying a high fixed amount over a long period of time such as a mortgage.

High fixed expenses can cause folks to go bankrupt.

If you do an online search, you can lookup bankrupt celebrities and see my point.

When going through their financial records and bank statements you see the glaring red flags right off the bat.

Here is a typical list of items I see when high profile people file for bankruptcy:

  • The newest or latest Range Rover
  • Large wardrobes and expensive designer suits or furniture
  • Huge credit card bills
  • Expensive foreign car leases
  • Tax liens
  • Medical debt
  • Back mortgage payments
  • Multiple child support or alimony payments
  • Back taxes owed to Uncle Sam

There is one-line item I would like to pull out in particular and that is the mortgage payment.

Let’s say hypothetically speaking, one was to bring in $70,000 a year, but was once pulling in $520,000. That’s a pretty huge drop in income right there. Would signify some belt tightening needs to be done right?

Nope.

Instead folks were continuing to live in the same neighborhood and even in the same house. In addition, driving fancy cars, and pretty much were living as if there had been no drop in income.

That is no way to do your finances.

You have to respect money. You cannot spend before you earn. As the song goes in the lyrics stated above, you’ve got to work to succeed.

You can’t continue to have the trappings of success, if you truly can’t afford them.

So, let’s discuss buying less home in order to be wealthier.

HOME PRICES ARE THROUGH THE ROOF

According to Zillow.com, the median home price in Washington DC is $575, 800.

If you have a 5% interest rate and a 30-year mortgage, that means you will owe $3,091 a month. And that’s just for the bricks! You have not paid property taxes, closing costs, home warranty, or utilities.

Adding in homeowner’s insurance and property tax, you are looking at $3,419 a month.

The Mortgage affordability rule states you should spend no more than 36 percent of your gross income on all your total debt, and this includes mortgages.

Based on the numbers, to purchase a home at this price point, you would need to bring in over $12k a month. That’s $150k a year. And this amount includes no down payment no debt except a mortgage.

Who doesn’t have a car payment these days? However, make anything less than that and its sorry game over.

Let’s not forget that this is for a property in Washington DC. There are tons of other metropolitan areas where to pay to play is even more egregious.

What a home in swanky parts of New York, California, Connecticut, Florida, Colorado, or Texas? Well, it’ll cost you.

Homes in gated communities can be well into the seven figure range.

If we take three times $575,800, that gives us $1,727,400. A $1.7M home will cost you approximately $10k per month, which is $120k a year and $10k of that goes just to property taxes.

In a decade you would have paid $120k for property taxes, just for you to sit on your couch in your living room .

That means a $3.5M home would cost the homeowner $250k over 10 years.

That’s right. A quarter of a mil. Just because the house is standing.

PROPERTY TAXES ARE FOREVER

Oh and by the way, did I mention that property taxes are forever?

You don’t ever stop paying it.

That means you will always have some cost associated with owning a home, even if everything inside of it and the dwelling itself is paid for.

Wishing you could buy a manse like Hova and Beyoncé. Well, be prepared to shell out big bucks cause the property bill alone is massive.

It was reported they bought an $88M mansion in California. A pricey piece of property indeed. A ritzy neighborhood for sure and a jaw-dropping beauty of a home.

In sunny California, the property tax rate is composed of three types of levies: general tax levy, voter approved bond indebtedness repayment, and special district assessments. The general tax levy was frozen by Proposition 13 at 1 percent of assessed property value.

According to Joel Fox of The Sacramento Bee, “Taxes haven’t exactly disappeared under Proposition 13. Property tax revenue is up 1,000% since 1978 and is growing faster than personal income. However, individual taxpayers are protected by Prop. 13, locking in property taxes when they buy their home and limiting future increases.

So, let’s get down to the bottom-line. Property taxes on an $88 million-dollar home at 1% is $880,000 dollars! That is for one year. I shudder to think about the cost of upkeep.

Although, this is obviously not what the average American homeowner is paying in property taxes, it does illustrate that paying these taxes can be mighty expensive. Especially, if you are living on a fixed income, which many Americans one day likely will be.

HOW MUCH CAN YOU SAVE

What can you do instead of buying a huge property?

Glad you asked.

You can buy less home and save money.

This will effectively allow you to increase the amount of money you save.

For example, just buying a property that is $100,000 cheaper could allow you to save $584 a month in mortgage payments and property taxes.

Investing that $584 over 30 years at an 8% rate of return could net you $877,423.

You would be giving up close to $900k in wealth to live in a neighborhood that ends in the name of Hills instead of Heights.

Basically, you could save a small fortune.

HOW MUCH GREENBACKS MAGNET SAVES

I decided to buy a smaller home than most friends and family members I know.

In one case, I paid $500k less than my peers or their families. In another, I paid less than $700k!

Just figured less home would mean less to do for maintenance, lower utilities, and more freedom because less time is needed to manage my household.

I was right.

It is way less stress to care for a smaller versus a larger home.

You have less stuff because you have less space.

Either you throw out and donate crap or get creative in storing it. I prefer to come up with less storage solutions and just stop buying stuff.

It has paid off handsomely.

I gave my savings amount in a post I did called How Millennial Money inspired me to save $13,333.06 a year. Well, now I’m giving you the visuals. I highlighted in red what I’m saving now.

GBM savings growth chart 

After, I started ramping up my savings it just took off. I am on track to save 1,000% more income than I did in 2015. Not too shabby.

I say buy less home, build more wealth.

How not to be house rich, cash poor

“If we command our wealth, we shall be rich and free. If our wealth commands us, we are poor indeed.” —Edmund Burke

I remember watching an episode of Property Brothers and they were telling this couple that you do not want to spend too much or overspend on a home and end up being house rich and cash poor.

They instead wanted the couple to buy a fixer-upper, do some sweat equity, renovate the home, and put that money into their pockets.

Basically, when you buy a turn-key home, the work has already been done and you are paying the homeowners for the money they put into the home on renovations.

However, then you buy the house at a markup.

This is due to the fact that they may pay $20,000 for renovations and then the property may increase in value by $40,000 or double what they paid. Thus, allowing them to increase the purchase price of the property, ergo you pay them to renovate.

That’s pretty steep for move-in-ready.

If you do the work yourself, you get to keep the value that the home increases by.

This means buying a fixer-upper for $300,000 and putting in $20,000 for renovations will push the home value to $340,000 and let you keep the $20k in equity for yourself instead of putting it in someone else’s pocket.

If you read my last post, Save $10,000 by Avoiding PMI, then you know I am all about saving that paper.

So, let me show you how not to be cash poor, but house rich.

WHAT DOES HOUSE RICH, CASH POOR MEAN?

According to Investopedia, “house poor is a situation that describes a person who spends a large proportion of his or her total income on home ownership, including mortgage payments, property taxes, maintenance and utilities.”

Basically, you are paying more for your home than you can afford or simply buying too much home.

If you have to pay more than 40% of your income for your dwelling, then you will become cash poor.

Matter of fact, if the value of your home decreases, you can be both house and cash poor.

When you are house rich that means all your money or wealth is tied up in your home. The home equity may be something like $150,000, but you only have $1,500 in the bank. That is not even enough to cover one month’s mortgage payment!

In order to shift this, you would want $40,000 in the bank, and to owe less than $150k on your home. That $40k would be enough to pay one year’s worth of expenses including mortgage payments ($1,600 x 12 = $19,200).

You would need a fixed rate mortgage to help you do this.

STAY AWAY FROM VARIABLE RATE LOANS

The ARM, or “adjustable rate mortgage” loan is too dangerous. Any loan product that can change at the drop of a hat and without a moment’s notice is too risky.

Let’s think about this for a second. Why is anything at a drop of a hat so bad? Well, did you ever see the movie Tombstone?

The idiom is likely to have come from the Old West, when duels would begin with a signal consisting of a man grabbing his hat and thrusting it toward the ground, before weapons are drawn.

Is this any way you want any part of your life to be lived?! Absolutely, not.

Entertaining in the movies sure, but not for real life.

This type of trickery should be left out of the equation.

First, lenders approve you for wayyy too much. Second, they tell you it’s okay to only pay the interest when it’s really not. As you cannot get out of debt, without paying off the principal of a loan.

And going for the trifecta of trickery, the third thing lenders do, and this is the hat trick, your mortgage payments jump so high Bryce Harper couldn’t catch it!

Your mortgage payments spikes upward too sharply for most folks to keep up.

A reasonable $1,600 mortgage payment could reset and go up to $2,400 in a single month!

That’s no joke.

I had a conversation with someone this actually happened to. Shocks like this are hard for most people to fathom and continue to live comfortably.

A fixed rate loan allows you to plan the monthly budget in advance.

When you how much you monthly nut has to cover, you are just better off.

HOW TO BE CASH RICH

Buying a home for less than you can afford is a start.

If you are approved for $400,000, then slash this amount by 25%. This equals $400k x 0.25 = $100,000!

You heard me. Then bank says $400k, and then you say:  I’ll go $300k.

In one fell swoop, you both cut the amount of home you buy and monthly payment by 25%

You then take that $100,000 and over the course of the 15, 20, or 30 years you are paying your mortgage, you put this same amount into mutual funds.

You could do the S&P 500 index. Do whatever you want.

The goals are to simultaneously invest that money and pay down your mortgage.

For instance, that $100k over 30 years translates to investing $277 per month for 360 months. That would allow you to save anywhere from $500,000 to over $1 million depending on your rate of return through compound interest.

That means over a 30 year time period you have paid off a worth an estimated $300,000 or possibly more as home value may increase during this time and have an additional $800,000 in investments.

You would have a net worth of $1.1 million and would put you in the top 10% of wealthy households in America. See my post; Join the top 10% club for more on this.

WORDS OF WISDOM

A few words of wisdom to follow:

  • Buy less home than you can afford
  • Spend no more than 25% of your income on the housing payment
  • Invest the difference of the savings you received from not paying the full amount approved for
  • Stick to a housing budget
  • Have a god size emergency fund of 8 months or more

It sounds so simple, but most folks are actually living beyond their means and buying my house than they can afford. I have actually seen people in their 50s signing up for 30 year mortgages! Holy crap! The odds of paying off this home are slim at that age.

If you can follow the advice I give above, you could find yourself at the top of the economic pyramid.

Don’t believe me? Read my post Join the top 5% club and find out!