OT: Cost of your first home? (Jxn housing thread got me thinking)

HotMop

Well-known member
May 8, 2006
4,599
1,138
113
2006
$148,000
3/2 1800 sq ft

The most amazing thing is apartment rent now. I have some co-workers who are paying $1900/month for a 2 BR/2 BA in Flowood.
Least you could do is give them one of the big screens instead of tossing it to the curb.
 

Hot Rock

Active member
Jan 2, 2010
1,322
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$39,500 - 4BR, 2B. 1 acre …. Dirt road Houston, MS. 1986

FHA STYLE with enclosed carport as 4th BR with added carport and extra outside utility room.

later had to tear out carport br because it was not enclosed properly and had mold. Left with 3Br double garage afterward. Sold in 2010 for 72,000. Burned to ground a few years later
 
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Jan 4, 2024
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I remember in '74 (age 11) we bought a big home on Grand Blvd in Greenwood for around $40K and Mama saying "It's so beautiful but how are we ever gonna pay for it?".
 

CoastTrash

Member
Aug 22, 2012
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Apparently 2010-2015 was a generational buying opportunity.

The billion dollar question is whether 2024 is the same????????????

Who do we blame for this ****?
 

PBRME

Well-known member
Feb 12, 2004
9,425
1,938
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2006. 2000 sf 182k. Within 6 months it lost 30% of its value thanks to the housing bust.
Original plan was sell in a few years and build. 14 years later the value finally rose above original purchase price.
Sold in 21 for 24k thanks to the new bubble.
 
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horshack.sixpack

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Oct 30, 2012
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Apparently 2010-2015 was a generational buying opportunity.

The billion dollar question is whether 2024 is the same????????????

Who do we blame for this ****?
Not bashing you, we are basically "trained" by our parties to think this way, but I think that us constantly looking to place blame rather than find solutions and understand that most of the time things just happen, run in cycles, etc. I believe this line of thinking, fomented by our society, is one of the most detrimental things that has happened in this country.

I'm not excepting myself from falling victim, just trying to recognize in my life where I fall in the trap and try not to linger there any longer.
 

horshack.sixpack

Well-known member
Oct 30, 2012
8,690
4,584
113
2006. 2000 sf 182k. Within 6 months it lost 30% of its value thanks to the housing bust.
Original plan was sell in a few years and build. 14 years later the value finally rose above original purchase price.
Sold in 21 for 24k thanks to the new bubble.
Funny, that crash, while it did not put me underwater, it erased enough of my equity that I completely changed my mindset on home ownership. I was on a tear to push as much equity as I could into it and pay it off as soon as I could. That crash made me realize that I had put too much of my money in a single illiquid investment. After things recovered, I refinanced at a low rate, pulled a lot of equity out and put it to work in the market. Turns out to be one of my rare good financial ideas...
 
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LordMcBuckethead

Well-known member
Sep 30, 2022
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825
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My answer: $98,500 3/2 ~1600 sf on 1/2 acre

ETA: 1997
Ocean Springs - Fountainbleu Area
1200 SF
3 BR 2 BA
$119,000
2007

The realtor really screwed me on the comps when I sold it in 2014. They downgraded the 3rd bedroom to storage because it didn't have a window adjacent to it. It was a loft. Sold it in 2014 for 89k. Best decision I have ever made was leaving the coast.
 
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TrueMaroonGrind

Well-known member
Jan 6, 2017
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Not bashing you, we are basically "trained" by our parties to think this way, but I think that us constantly looking to place blame rather than find solutions and understand that most of the time things just happen, run in cycles, etc. I believe this line of thinking, fomented by our society, is one of the most detrimental things that has happened in this country.

I'm not excepting myself from falling victim, just trying to recognize in my life where I fall in the trap and try not to linger there any longer.
The market is tough at times. Focusing on what you can do to mitigate the damage or protecting yourself can do wonders. Car prices are outrageous… keep the one you have. Interest rates are nuts… don’t take on new debt. Capitalism is great but also cruel. Blaming others really doesn’t help you out much and leads people to make awful decisions.
 
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Bowdawg

Member
Jan 8, 2023
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2013 Built in Carmel, IN for $444,000. 0.27 acre lot. Above ground 3,200 sq ft. Also had an 1,800 sq ft finished basement. Total livable space 5,000 sq ft.
 

MSUDOG24

Member
Mar 31, 2021
372
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1982 - one half of a duplex, 1200 sf $60K. Because of a high mortgage rate, it cost me $65K to pay it off 5 years later. Wonderful negative amortization program by the loan industry ( my mortgage was at 17.5%).
Hey, a fellow former negative amortization'er!
First house was in north St. Louis - 1980, 900sf, 3/1.5 (the .5 in the "master suite"**)52,000, rate at 16 or so on a conventional.
Then bought a house in "west county" in 1982/3, 1800sf, 4/2.5, 92,000 and this is where the NA scheme came into play for me as I recall with "lower interest rates" (seems the precursor to ARMs?). Guessing this is how we thought we could "afford it" and I bit. In hindsight, I didn't really understand what I was biting off but thankfully I was transferred 2 years later and the company bought my house to pull me out of that fire. An early adulthood lesson learned.