What is the minimum time to own a home before selling, considering market factors?

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  • #105566 Reply
    Christine

      2 years to avoid paying capital gains on the profit

      #105567 Reply
      Lori

        Really depends on the local market. Most areas are still seeing home appreciation well over 5% annually.

        This question would be best answered by a local realtor with many years of experience in the area he would be buying.

        #105568 Reply
        Serena

          In my 5th house that I’ve bought, have stayed anywhere from 11months to 4.5yrs in them. To short of time depends on the housing market you are in.

          1. Never buy a house you don’t think someone else would buy because you never know if you’re going to have to sell and move.

          2. Capital gains for a single person comes into play if you make 250k profit from your original buying price as a single person(500k for married filing joint).

          I have bought my own ‘rental’ twice because I knew we weren’t staying long but fixed up the house while living in it.

          I would not recommend buying a house you’re not going to live in for at least 2yrs.

          #105569 Reply
          Penh

            At least two years to avoid paying taxes on the profit. If it’s completely unavoidable, at least a year so you only pay long term capital gains tax and you can deduct commissions for the realtor from the profit to reduce your taxable base.

            We’ve had to sell in under two so we’ve had to learn this.

            #105570 Reply
            Josh

              I think the length of time is generally 5-7 years.
              Although, it highly depends on what’s going on in the market.

              Right now I would STRONGLY encourage anyone NOT to buy right now.

              But to recoup closing costs etc with general 3% house inflation.

              4 years would be a bare minimum.

              Although, when the market is super hot. You can sign a contract and never move in and make a profit. But today is not those times.

              #105571 Reply
              Danny

                I really don’t like hearing that my clients want to sell in anything less than 5 years, conservatively 7.

                2008 was considered the biggest real estate downturn in history. It took most markets a full five years to recover.

                Taken into consideration closing costs, and you’d be still in the red in most markets up to 6/7 years after that downturn.

                So, 7 years would be the most conservative break even or “green” number.

                #105572 Reply
                Tricia

                  He should keep current home and rent it when he moves.

                  #105573 Reply
                  Joe

                    Assuming the goal is to not lose money when he sells, then I think he either needs to buy low and flip ASAP, or buy and hold for the long term (7 years or more).

                    IMO, it’s not safe to buy and hold real estate in the short/mid term.

                    In addition to price, there are also transaction costs such as real estate commissions and closing costs that needs to be considered.

                    I bought a rental properties in 2005/2006 at the height of the real estate bubble and it took about 8-10 years before the prices recovered.

                    #105574 Reply
                    Richard

                      At least 7 years. Transaction costs are high.

                      #105575 Reply
                      Andrea

                        The 2 year rule is for investment property, not primary homes. so much misinformation in this comment section.

                        #105576 Reply
                        Bethany

                          You’d want to stay in a home at least five years to make it worthwhile, generally.

                          2 years to avoid cap gains, but it’s unlikely he’d amass much in cap gains in just 24 months.

                          #105577 Reply
                          Chris

                            I’m not sure what question you are asking. Are you asking what amount of time you would need to own vs rent to break even?

                            It depends on a lot of variables- local real estate tax rates, hoa fees, insurance costs and some known transaction costs – realtor fees (6%ish), interest costs, mortgage insurance protection(if applicable) and mortgage points paid.

                            In the near term consider no appreciation of the house. Compare to rents.

                            #105578 Reply
                            Bill

                              I bought a rental property in 2005, I was underwater for a long time until post Covid. I unloaded it for a nice profit In January 2022.

                              #105579 Reply
                              Andrea

                                You can calculate what you would gain or lose financially by comparing costs to rent for a year versus buying, including all
                                costs and estimating a modest increase in value.

                                if rents are lower than his mortgage would be then he should continue to rent, if his issue is $.

                                Why does he want to buy instead if rent?

                                #105580 Reply
                                Jennifer

                                  I would also consider the cost of buying the home. Closing costs, down payment, will the house appreciate enough in the time to cover the cost?

                                  #105581 Reply
                                  Mindi

                                    If he doesn’t want to stay there then I don’t recommend buying.

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