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Hey BFC, time to help me make good decisions with my life. Things are changing in Moanaland. I am... - Getting married in September - Quitting my job/sabbaticaling in December - Probably moving for good next spring - Possibly selling my house First order of business: the job thing. My side job income has been surpassing my day job income for about 6 months now. I'm telling my boss soon (like, tomorrow) that I'm going to leave in December. I'm going to be renting a place in a different city from Dec-May to see if it's the city we want to raise a family in. San Diego most definitely is not. Please reassure me that I'm not crazy to quit my job. I made a income/expenses spreadsheet for you guys and it kind of helped me think I'm not crazy, but my writing income is seriously variable. If you want a better comparison, my pretax day job income is $6000 a month so November was really probably the first month I beat out my day job income with writing. Expenses include stuff like investments and taxes because I don't know how to take that poo poo out of Mint easily, but you can see in the past year my net worth has risen about $200k, 100k of that is my savings/investments, 100k is home value, so I'm not at SloMo levels of spending, I promise. Second order of business: the house. To sell or not to sell? I know for sure I don't want to live in San Diego long-term (this is where my ex's family lives which is why I bought here in the first place). But I'm not sure whether I'm better off trying to find renters or selling. Zillow estimate is $570k, I'd guess I could sell it for $550k-600k based on comps. My mortgage is 15-year (I know, I'm retarded) at 2.75% with monthly payments around $2200. I owe about $240k on it still. Comparable houses around here rent for $2000-$3000, but I'd probably be at the lower end since it's a 2-bedroom instead of 3. Why I'm thinking of selling: - possibly buying another house up north instead - I don't know if I want to deal with the hassle of repairs (it's a 1950s house with lovely wiring and plumbing, half the outlets aren't grounded or 3-prong, and I'm sure there will be costly repairs in the future) - dealing with renters is le suck Why I'm thinking of keeping it: - renter depreciation tax deduction - great rents compared to mortgages around here - I want to downsize my living situation a bit, so I would have to sell all my poo poo if I sell the house (piano, library, etc) and that's a dang hassle Other possibilities I haven't yet considered in detail but would like to know more about : - lease to own?? - FSBO stuff - ??? Thoughts? Comments? Suggestions? Help me BFC, you're my only hope!
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# ¿ May 21, 2014 02:33 |
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# ¿ May 22, 2024 11:05 |
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slap me silly posted:As for the house, I only see one reason to keep it, and that's that reliable rental income could help buffer your less predictable writing income. But after all the expenses of renting it it looks like you'll about break even. So yeah, sell that poo poo. Is it really that straightforward then? What about if I refinanced for a 30-year mortgage on what I owed? I'd be paying like $1200 a month and renting it out at $2500, giving me like $15k for repair money each year. Still no? No, I guess not. If I made like $300k profit and invested it at 4%, that would give me like $12k a year, and it would be much more liquid and I wouldn't have to pay for repairs. But I also wouldn't get the mortgage interest tax deduction and wouldn't own the property outright after 30 years. Hrm. God, this is complicated, but I'm glad that it's looking to be kind of a wash either way, makes me feel better about my ambivalence. You have to pay long-term capital gains on profits over $250k, I see. Didn't even consider that, great, another variable to consider. Droo, thanks for the advice about selling, I like the "every room with a purpose" plan. I have 75 in cash to keep me afloat and I'm hoarding like a motherbitch until Dec just to be sure that I'm okay but it's super scary thinking about not adding to savings anymore.
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# ¿ May 21, 2014 04:21 |
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Well okay, I'm so glad I asked here before worrying about it too much. DO ALWAYS SELL. I guess I should start putting together a separate house-selling thread for everyone.. dreesemonkey posted:Coming from a guy who is about as risk averse as they come, I think quitting your job in this case is a sound decision. I'm making the following assumptions: 2. It already is but dang, it does make me nervous having such a variable source of income. I guess if I don't have a mortgage it makes me feel a bit better, that way I can cut down my housing costs if I need to. 3. Probably, I can always teach/tutor math and science if I need to. I'm going to tell my boss that I can continue working via Skype with students, I can probably get 10-20 hours a week doing that if I want to at $45/hr. It's a solid backup plan and I enjoy working with kids, so yeah. Okay. My secret money earning ways are pretty easy: read a lot and learn new skills instead of watching TV and buying poo poo. I actually chose to live in high cost of living cities right out of college because I knew that incomes would be higher and I would be saving a decent percentage of a higher income. Now I'm just looking for a good community to raise a family in. omg I feel so old ;;
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# ¿ May 21, 2014 16:56 |
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Engineer Lenk posted:Only thing that might be tricky is buying a new house. If you're in a low-enough priced area to make a cash offer, you'd be fine, if a bit underdiversified. However, if you need a loan you may be in a shaky place. They usually want two years of self-employment income for stated income mortgages and will take the lesser of the two for loan amounts.
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# ¿ May 21, 2014 16:58 |
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Update: I told my boss today I was planning on leaving in December, he was cool with everything and we're working on how to transition my responsibilities to the other tutors in the office. I don't know whether I should be trying to sell the house in the fall/winter before I leave, or try to rent it out to people for a few months and then sell it in the spring, or...? It definitely won't happen until after the wedding in September, but yeah. Is there a best time in the year to sell a house? Should I stay away from doing a short-term rental until the spring?
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# ¿ May 21, 2014 22:25 |
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100 HOGS AGREE posted:I guess it really depends on what your plans are once it sells, if it sells before you're planning on moving. Would you rent an apartment short term? Go live with the fiance for a couple months? Or are you both living there now? I'm definitely pulling a ton of poo poo out of the closets and seeing what I can sell now, though, and I need to spruce up the house anyway before the reception. I'm looking at FSBO and things like Redfin - their options look really promising. I'll probably put up a "Make me Move" on zillow for a little more than I want for it to see if anyone's interested.
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# ¿ May 22, 2014 01:50 |
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Harry posted:In mint, set investments to Investments-Buy. It shouldn't count as an expense then.
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# ¿ May 22, 2014 03:09 |
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Am I using an outdated version or something?Blackjack2000 posted:Do you mind if I ask about your writing business? I figured it would be in a thread somewhere in BFC but I haven't been able to find it.
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# ¿ May 22, 2014 03:33 |
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rcrchc posted:I asked the same questions when we put my boyfriend's condo on the market, and our realtor said summer is the best time because of people wanting to move before their kids start school, but with the way the market in SD is right now there really isn't a bad time. For reference, we accepted an offer two weeks to the day after listing for just below asking price. If you have it priced right with a proactive realtor who can advise on any changes you could make to help it sell, you shouldn't have any problem getting it sold quickly.
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# ¿ May 24, 2014 02:19 |
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EB Nulshit posted:Is it still possible to make money writing and selling erotica n Amazon? I thought that all dried up when they closed the goon thread. Is there somewhere else I can follow that discussion? ZentraediElite posted:Explore FSBO if you can. I don't know your market, but my parents have sold all of their houses that way. If you're willing to do some extra leg work you can skip those awful agent costs.
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# ¿ May 25, 2014 21:36 |
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# ¿ May 22, 2024 11:05 |
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Slow Motion posted:1. What are your savings and how much of the value of the house are you going to have for savings after you move? - closing costs/agents fees (~$20k) - moving costs ($2k) So I should end up with around $340k or so for savings. Which is a lot. But not enough to retire, and I'd like to not deplete my savings too much when I'm young. Oh, and I have about $150k in retirement savings, but I would never touch those, right? quote:2. Your writing income looks remarkably stable for a side gig (or any business, really). What makes you feel it's unstable? Is it from a single title or multiple titles? You need to make some best-case/worst-case projections on that income stream. Multiple titles are better in that regard as standard deviation is a square-root function. quote:3. How marketable are your skills if you were to seek employment again? I could always do SAT/math tutoring for $45/hr over Skype with my old job; it would probably take six months to ramp back up to full time with that if I needed to, or I could do it for myself in a new city. Or I could build out my graphic design business, it was making $1k/month when I did it part-time. quote:I guess there's a final question which is what are your goals? Ball out? Retire? Cruise on autopilot and enjoy writing for a living? Then yes, I will dick around all day making pottery and reading literary fiction and gardening and doing other generally less profitable things that I like to do
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# ¿ May 26, 2014 02:41 |