What’s the smartest move: sell a nearly-paid-off house in Texas or keep it?

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  • #103547 Reply
    Patrick

      It’s his house and his life. Give him your opinion, if he asks for it, but beyond that stay in your lane.

      #103548 Reply
      Adam

        The last 10 years have been an anomaly in real estate. Average home appreciation historically is 3-4%.

        Not exactly something to be too excited about if you’re not living there or getting rental income.

        They seem to have a pretty good plan selling and downsizing

        #103549 Reply
        Dawn

          If the smaller place suits his needs, it sounds like he is making the financially savvy move to reduce his expenses.

          He will save a lot in real estate taxes and possibly other property expenses as well: insurance, maintenance, etc.

          #103550 Reply
          Melissa

            Appreciation on a house is not good enough if you don’t really want to live there or just really want to be debt free.

            If he buys a smaller house that will likely appreciate too.

            His expenses will be less.

            The question is where does he want to live.

            Also the stress relief of being debt free, even if it’s “Just a mortgage” to others, is well worth it to some people.

            #103551 Reply
            Chrissy

              If you think it is a smart move, you could buy it from him if the FHA interest rate is assumable.

              He gets the money and you get the valuable appreciating property.

              Otherwise, his goals sound pretty reasonable.

              #103552 Reply
              Diana

                Since his house doubled in price I think he’d be okay to sell. Buy low, sell high is the strategy.

                #103553 Reply
                Rachel

                  You mean turn it into a rental? IMO if he wouldn’t have purchased the house to rent out he should sell it.

                  He could possibly loose out on owner occupied tax benefits

                  #103554 Reply
                  Kent

                    You might imagine that the property is going to appreciate in the coming years.

                    But the statistics suggest real estate is already nosebleed-priced.

                    #103555 Reply
                    Christina

                      He wants to sell, take equity and buy a smaller place and be debt free. Why would you steer him away from what HE wants to do with HIS own money?

                      Some people value the peace of mind of being debt free and doesn’t care/need potential appreciation.

                      Let him be.

                      #103556 Reply
                      John

                        Not everyone inspires to be a landlord. This can be a huge burden too many.

                        He wants to live mortgage free, show him the roadmap to do that.

                        #103557 Reply
                        Allison

                          I think it entirely depends on how much he likes the house.

                          #103558 Reply
                          Dawn

                            If he’s trying to downsize monthly expenses, I think it’s a great move. Will the new home be in the same area?

                            It will appreciate too then.

                            #103559 Reply
                            Marty

                              Yes. Let him
                              Do what he wants. If he wouldn’t have had that house in the last 10
                              Years and would

                              Have invested it it would have more than doubled

                              #103560 Reply
                              张扬

                                Does he live living there? I fell out of love with my last house and downsizing has made me so much happier, even if I lost some appreciation in the process.

                                As a friend you should not only want him to be better off financially, but happier and less stressed about his life too.

                                #103561 Reply
                                Laila

                                  If he buys his next house in all cash, what is his age, in how many years will he retire, and what money will he live on?

                                  Some people prefer the peace of mind of being mortgage debt free in retirement.

                                  One consideration, however, is that once all that money goes toward paying for a home,

                                  it can become quite illiquid, especially if interest rates are too high,

                                  and/or if one doesn’t have regular and relatively high W-2 income to show to potential lenders.
                                  —-
                                  Is he single or married in terms of being exempt from paying taxes on $250K profit vs $500K profit, should he decide to sell.

                                  #103562 Reply
                                  Yvonne

                                    Why would another smaller house in the same area not increase in value at close to the same rate?

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