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Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Crash Index -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tradelite who wrote (67443)11/29/2006 1:05:16 AM
From: Lizzie TudorRespond to of 306849
 
you can rent houses in CA for $2K/mo that sell for $850K and sometimes even $1mm if it is on a bunch of land. Its an amazing dichotomy.



To: Tradelite who wrote (67443)11/29/2006 5:17:19 AM
From: arun geraRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 306849
 
And what are these houses going for right now? And what are the taxes?

In Central NJ area a $400,000 townhouse rents for only $2000/month.

-Arun

>Average rent for a one or two BR hi-rise or garden-type apartment in the DC area is somewhere around $1,500 and can go MUCH higher than that if you want certain amenities and a decent neighborhood. (Check rental ads, which I think are available at washingtonpost.com and elsewhere).

For a single-family home, rent varies way up into the thousands, depending on size and location. A house the size of mine in the same school district would probably pull in $3,500 a month for a landlord these days.>



To: Tradelite who wrote (67443)12/4/2006 11:03:22 PM
From: DoughboyRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 306849
 
Tradelite, since I've rented out my condo in DC recently, I thought I would share (though I apologize since I'm hopping into this conversation a bit late). I have 2BR/2BA condo in the heart of Dupont Circle. It rented for $2450/mo. which is only a $50 increase over my last tenant. Basically, rents have been stuck in the $2400-2500 range for three years. My last increase was in 2003, when I got my existing tenant to raise from $2250 to $2400, about 10%. At the original purchase price of $164,000 in 1992, I seem to be making a decent profit, even with the skyrocketing condo fees and property taxes. But as someone pointed out, I think it was you, you have to compare apples to apples. The place is worth somewhere around $600,000 today (down from the peak price in the summer of '05 which I ballpark was around $700,000). A buyer today with 20% down would pay roughly $3200 in principal & interest on a $480,000 mortgage. Add in $450/mo in DC taxes & insurance, the $450/mo. condo fee, a modest $150/mo. in repairs, and that's not even taking into account the opportunity cost of sinking $120k in the downpayment instead of the stock market. Grand total $4250/mo. buy vs. $2450/mo. rent. Even if you snag the first-time DC homebuyer tax credit and the mortgage interest deduction, you come out way behind. And I wouldn't count on appreciation bailing you out. As you probably know, there is a huge glut of DC condos, and I see prices stagnating for 3-5 years.

Doughboy