As a renter, I had no motivation to fix anything though. Manager always took care of it! I also quite enjoy not having to worry about yard work. I think I was quite spoiled as a renter. I was doing more work living with parents!
As a renter, I had no motivation to fix anything though. Manager always took care of it! I also quite enjoy not having to worry about yard work. I think I was quite spoiled as a renter. I was doing more work living with parents!
Yeah, you don't have to fix stuff, but you acquire a sense of what breaks, how it affects you, and how it's fixed - with absolutely no risk. You're also - often - free to do as much as you like or as little, again with no risk.
Also, renting for awhile will give you a chance to get used to stuff like paying bills and buying all of your own food.
-Formerly Stabulator
Renting is also a test run of "what do I want/hate in a house".
Things you hate aren't so bad for 6 months, but you don't want in a place you own.
Moving can be a pain, but it means you are trying different places.
Think of it as a medium term test drive!
Constructive advice: Be nice to the Radiology Techs.
(That's advice for the job, not looking for a house. )
Just echoing other's points:
Talk with your folks in an honest fashion... find out if you can stay for a while and pay rent.
Then rent a small place, and as DN says, find out what you like and don't like.
And, for ME, the opposite of Russ's advice: I'm willing to drive a little further for work and food to live in an area and a home that suits my wants and needs. Plus, rural property can be MUCH cheaper that urban and suburban.
I didn't buy till I was 30+. 20-something me was too irresponsible to know what I wanted or needed.
Roughly speaking, in my area the average home price is around $205K. 20% of that to avoid PMI is $41,000 down. This would result in a base monthly mortgage on a 30-year fixed of $1,150/mo + repairs.
Or I can rent for $950/mo, $500 down, no yardwork and all maintenance included forever.
Doesn't work for everyone but it works for us.
When it comes to renting - yes - you do get the maintenance / yardwork bit... but only if you have a competent landlord. Which many places do not.
I agree -- my previous landlord was slightly shady (downtown studio apartment, $650/mo).
My "new" joint (also site of the first MWGTP party I hosted back in 2001 ) is better serviced, better maintained and much bigger w/. a garage. One must shop around to find AWESOME VALUE.
Oh, yeah, if I was looking at a couple acres with a shop and a garage and whatnot, commute time would be secondary (though I might check the typical traffic on the nearby freeway).
But, buying in suburbia, I'd want to minimize the amount of time I spent staring at the back of another car at a stoplight, know what I mean?
Whoomah!