Our house payment includes taxes and insurance but we pay right at 11% of our net earnings to our house payment
Senior Member
Same with insurance/taxes. Ours is a little less than 25%.
Senior Member
posted by Ironman92Our house payment includes taxes and insurance but we pay right at 11% of our net earnings to our house payment
If we are going off actual bring home (after 401k, medical ins, IRA contributions, etc) then 13%.
If we are going off of net (gross-taxes) then 10%.
Honorable Admin
Somewhere around 10%-12%, i believe.
Senior Member
Around 11%.
Tits McGee
4.8% lol. About 8% if you include gas, electric and water.
Administrator
posted by Fab4Runner4.8% lol. About 8% if you include gas, electric and water.
No definitely not including utilities.
Administrator
posted by jmogIf we are going off actual bring home (after 401k, medical ins, IRA contributions, etc) then 13%.
If we are going off of net (gross-taxes) then 10%.
Yeah, sorry just assumed a bit on that stuff being taken out of check
Senior Member
15%
Senior Member
posted by Fab4Runner4.8% lol. About 8% if you include gas, electric and water.
That’s really low, and seriously congrats on that.
12 years ago when we bought our house we were at around 25%.
Between 1 refi that dropped our interest a lot, and a lot more income than 12 years ago, that’s what got us to the % I listed above.
Use that low number to invest in IRA/401k and/or pay off your house way early.
That is a great job to get something livable at that low % unless you are making like $250k/yr or more.
Senior Member
My income can be pretty variable. I'd say my house payment is about 8-12% of gross income (excluding utilities). But if you only look at the interest portion it's considerably lower.
FYI, mortgages in more expensive cities limit out at 40% of household gross income. That may or may not make someone "house poor".
If you're under 25% of gross income you're doing it right.
Senior Member
20%
Past on refinancing this spring. We will likely sell within the next 3-5 years.
Houses in our area are going at a decent price and we can probably get $15k more than what we paid for our home in 2018. We have done some upkeep inside though too.
Senior Member
1/6th
Senior Member
about 20%
a few years ago I was in a different part of the country and it was 36%
Senior Member
15%
Member
Around 22% with 11 years left on the 15 year mortgage.
Administrator
posted by MontyBrunswickabout 20%
a few years ago I was in a different part of the country and it was 36%
36%...whoa
Senior Member
14.68% on a 15 year, with rate of 2.625%, I'm happy
Senior Member
refy tomorrow to a 20 year @ 3%....knocking 6 years off the mortgage and payment went up a whopping $60 a month
Reppin' the 330/216/843
posted by Spockrefy tomorrow to a 20 year @ 3%....knocking 6 years off the mortgage and payment went up a whopping $60 a month
Same. 5.5 years into a 30, about to refi to a 20 year at a similar rate. My rate was higher 5.5 years ago so my payment won't change. That said, 11% of our gross (includes prop insurance and tax), about 15% of net.
Senior Member
To each their own, but why are you guys doing 15-20 year mortgages? You're just accelerating paying down the principal which is returning a lousy 2-2.5% after taxes.
You can debate paying a little more to lock-in a rate for 30 years, but when you crunch the numbers it's hard to beat the savings on a 5 or 7-yr ARM. Rates have been low for 10+ years, and I don't see that changing significantly over the next 10 years.
Administrator
posted by gutTo each their own, but why are you guys doing 15-20 year mortgages? You're just accelerating paying down the principal which is returning a lousy 2-2.5% after taxes.
You can debate paying a little more to lock-in a rate for 30 years, but when you crunch the numbers it's hard to beat the savings on a 5 or 7-yr ARM. Rates have been low for 10+ years, and I don't see that changing significantly over the next 10 years.
Care to explain a little better to a gym teacher? We had a 30 year mortgage to buy our house, refinanced 1x and have 7 years left. Been here 17 years.
Administrator
posted by gutTo each their own, but why are you guys doing 15-20 year mortgages? You're just accelerating paying down the principal which is returning a lousy 2-2.5% after taxes.
You can debate paying a little more to lock-in a rate for 30 years, but when you crunch the numbers it's hard to beat the savings on a 5 or 7-yr ARM. Rates have been low for 10+ years, and I don't see that changing significantly over the next 10 years.
Care to explain a little better to a gym teacher? We had a 30 year mortgage to buy our house, refinanced 1x and have 7 years left. Been here 17 years.
Senior Member
We are fortunate in this regard. No house payment.
We had a 15 mortage that we paid off around 9 years agao.
Senior Member
Our house is paid off that is one of the benefits of being old and married for a long time.
Senior Member
posted by Ironman92Care to explain a little better to a gym teacher? We had a 30 year mortgage to buy our house, refinanced 1x and have 7 years left. Been here 17 years.
It's mainly a savings vehicle. On your taxes, only the interest is deductible. A house generally appreciates at about 2.5-3% per year. And there currently is an exemption of up to $500k capital gain for a married couple - meaning the gain is completely tax free. So you borrow money to buy the house at about 2% after tax, meanwhile it's appreciating at about 3% per year after tax.
So when you pay down the loan, you're only saving the after-tax interest. That means putting money into your house will yield a fixed 2% after-tax return. I would sincerely hope we could all beat that in the market over the long term, even with conservative investments.
Taking out a 15-yr fixed rate loan right now when 10-yr ARM's are available at 2.75% makes no sense to me. The slightly higher fixed rate loan will cost you thousands of dollars over 10 years, and saddle you with a larger payment with an ROI of 2%. But it's a great idea for people who can't save/invest their money.