In the Raleigh area, would you rent or buy right now?keep in mind, were i to rent i'd probably have to get at least a year lease, so that'd mean the earliest i could go back to looking to buy would be late 2008/early 2009i keep reading that the prices are still dropping but i've read differing opinions on when it'll hit bottom, so i'm hesitant to be locked into a lease and miss the window entirelyopinions?
12/29/2007 8:37:41 PM
It's a buyer's market out there, so now's a pretty good time to buy. This will probably be the case for the next year or so. Prices may drop more or level out, but we're not going to see the level of market correction that Tampa, Miami, Vegas or other formerly hot areas saw. Too many people are moving into the area.Also, there's been talk of a moratorium on new construction given the water situation. If that were to happen, prices will likely rise based on simple supply/demand.
12/29/2007 10:03:20 PM
buy downtown.
12/29/2007 10:30:54 PM
Buy now.Plenty of inventory on the market. Great environment to negotiate in. I don't really see prices dropping, they never surged that much here so they don't have much room to drop back down. People are more motivated to sell but not to the point where they can afford to take a huge loss, their homes never shot up in value. All that hype on fox news mainly pertains to other markets such as Florida where the prices jumped so high so fast there was not nearly enough demand to justify the prices. ]
12/29/2007 11:52:27 PM
my neighbor's house is for sale. buy it so i can have a walking-distance drinking buddy. btw, hi i'm jody. welcome to the neighborhood and have a beer.
12/30/2007 3:38:23 AM
buy low (now), sell high (later)
12/30/2007 6:36:51 AM
i think now is a good time to buy
12/30/2007 10:20:45 AM
My house is for rent in like 1-2 weeks.[Edited on December 30, 2007 at 12:05 PM. Reason : My fiance might even work out an alternative lease. He has done it before.]
12/30/2007 12:05:02 PM
12/30/2007 3:46:02 PM
if you're financially capable of purchasing a home right now, then I see 0 benefit of waiting. the tax write off alone should be enough incentive. if you do a 30 year fixed, the loan is going to be frontloaded with interest so very very little actually goes towards principal. 80-85% of your monthly payment is interest.personally, i think spending money on rent is the biggest waste of money ever.as a first time home buyer too, you can do an FHA and i think you only have to put 3% down. Ask for the seller to pay closing costs, and give you back a couple grand at closing so you can do some repairs. If you time the closing right, you can go almost two full months before making your first payment.like mentioned above, home prices arent going to drop enough(if at all) within the next year to make it worth waiting.
12/30/2007 6:37:55 PM
12/30/2007 7:12:59 PM
do you want to buy a house?can you afford to buy a house?if the answer is yes to those buy a house
12/30/2007 8:17:16 PM
thanks for the info guys
12/30/2007 9:32:56 PM
12/31/2007 2:24:50 AM
wtf kinda rabble is that
12/31/2007 10:08:22 AM
12/31/2007 11:35:08 AM
I would not go for a condo simply because the cost of owning them is ridiculous and they are not practical for your average homeowner. Homes downtown are expensive, but when you factor in the condo fees and high price/sf of condos the home is a much more practical purchase. They can build more condo buildings downtown until the market is flooded with them, but they can't create any more dirt to build them on. Buy a house and you own the land.
12/31/2007 12:08:32 PM
Dude ... Serious ... Driftwood Manor FTW!!It was a great buy for my wife and I 3 years ago ... you are looking at 1200 sqft for under 65k, with 125 per month in HOA/Pool fees.We sold ours to buy a home in RTP, but if I was to invest in a place for a single person, or married couple without kids, thats where I would be, since you can own your own place and pay less than rent for a 2 bedroom place.Just my advice. Its just outside the beltline on western, so if you think downtown is going to go up alot, then you can leverage that bet without paying the price for expensive downtown condos.
12/31/2007 12:30:42 PM
They're expensive, but so is lawn care, exterior painting, a new roof, and all the other things that are rolled into the fees. I'd love to live in one if I didn't make so much noise all the time. Raking, cutting grass, and keeping the yard relatively clean takes way more time than I like.
12/31/2007 12:32:18 PM
buy west raleigh or even johnston county, that land is going to go way up.
1/1/2008 1:25:15 PM
1/1/2008 6:11:41 PM
http://www.wral.com/business/story/2240549/
1/3/2008 2:58:20 PM
I have a friend who works for one of the megabuilders in Raleigh. He said they are discounting spec houses like crazy right now and still having a tough time selling them. They knocked off $100k on one of their luxury homes to get it to sell.
1/3/2008 3:06:58 PM
If you think mowing the lawn takes too long, you need a riding mower with a beer holder.
1/3/2008 10:54:28 PM
So, I'm bored browsing craigslist and decide to look at the housing classifieds(http://raleigh.craigslist.org/apa/)....and notice that there are a ton of advertisements for rent-to-own houses. Sounds like a wonderful idea, fundamentally. But my instincts tell me there is some rip-off or flashy marketing scheme in progress here. Anyone know anything about these?
1/4/2008 12:23:06 AM
Basically rent-to-own is a way for unscrupulous landlords to pocket extra deposit money. The way they work is you pay a deposit with your rent-to-own contract that is non-refundable if you don't end up purchasing, and a percentage of your rent each month would go toward the purchase if you actually closed on it. Other than that its a lease. A lot of people get caught up in this thinking its a wise move since the end they are looking for is owning a home. The fact is many people that do it will not ever be able to buy the home. If they were in a position to get a mortgage in the near future they would be taking one out now and buying outright.Usually what happens is the tenant never ends up closing, they move out eventually, after falling behind on the rent and the landlord keeps all of the money and his rental property. It is more a psychological thing than anything else, an "option to buy" with a lease attached if you will.
1/4/2008 1:45:46 AM
how long would you think the market will stay low like this?
1/11/2008 8:27:58 PM
1/11/2008 8:40:34 PM
1/12/2008 2:55:15 PM
1/12/2008 3:05:28 PM
Dude, by paying off a house you're building equity (which you can borrow against!), if you rent you're just pissing away money. If I could afford it I would by a two-unit house I could comfortably pay for myself and then just try my damndest to keep the other half full and pay that sucker off hella quick!
1/13/2008 2:46:13 PM
1/13/2008 2:51:33 PM
1/13/2008 4:52:27 PM
^^^Every home equity loan I've every seen has had a rate that was somewhere in between "complete shit" and "oh god, I missed a credit card payment"
1/13/2008 5:37:47 PM
If you have good credit you could get one for 7%.
1/13/2008 5:50:04 PM
I think that is his arguement, which you helped support.[Edited on January 13, 2008 at 8:03 PM. Reason : ,]
1/13/2008 8:02:52 PM
That you can get a home equity loan for 7%?
1/13/2008 8:04:20 PM
Are you fucking with me kid?
1/13/2008 8:43:00 PM
No. Something wrong with what I said?
1/13/2008 8:45:44 PM
You dont think someone with good credit could do better than a 7% loan?I cant tell if youre fucking with me, youre an idiot, or both.[Edited on January 13, 2008 at 8:47 PM. Reason : .]
1/13/2008 8:47:40 PM
No, I don't think someone with good credit could do much better than a 7% home equity loan.
1/13/2008 8:50:43 PM
Which , again (for the third or fourth time now), is a rate higher than that of a :mortgagenew caror student loanwhat else would you finance?[Edited on January 13, 2008 at 8:57 PM. Reason : .]
1/13/2008 8:56:48 PM
ill be the first to admit i actually know nothing about student loans
1/13/2008 8:58:53 PM
You've got to be shitting me. Of course people don't use home equity loans for those things b/c you can get lower rates on those specific things elsewhere. Do you want me to make you an itemized list of other stuff you would possible want to use financing for? Lets start with1. Home improvements
1/13/2008 8:59:28 PM
I think we can use the black and white copier for this job.David0603 but the boss wants it in COLOR
1/13/2008 9:01:57 PM
2. Consolidating credit card debt
1/13/2008 9:06:32 PM
It doesn't matter if the rate if higher if it is over 30 years instead of 5 or 10 the payment will be scales less.And just completely refinancing is much better then helocs anyway.
1/13/2008 9:38:20 PM
Buy in Apex.
1/13/2008 9:54:56 PM