10 Reasons to Buy
a Home
1. House prices tend to rise over time,
so a house is one of the best investments
you can make. Home prices in the U.S.
have risen three percent to six percent
a year for the past 20 years. That trend
is likely to continue. So if you buy a home
now, you’ve put your capital in a safe investment
where it is likely to grow.
2. You’ll pay less tax. You can
deduct the interest you pay on your mortgage
from your taxable income at the end of the
year. The amount of tax break will depend
on factors like your personal tax bracket,
the size of your mortgage, the rate of interest
you pay on it and how long you’ve had the
mortgage. As a general rule, the newer the
mortgage, the greater the amount of interest
you pay each month and the bigger the tax
break. Recent borrowers with young mortgages
tend to most benefit.
3. You’ll be buying a piece of real
property rather than paying your land lords
house payment. The real cost of renting
is higher than the monthly payment. There
is also an opportunity cost equal to the
amount you would gain by using the money
you pay monthly, to purchase a home instead.
Even if the house you purchased did not
appreciate in price, you would be able to
sell it and recoup some of the money you
put into it just in the tax savings alone.
4. Interest rates are still historically
low. This makes it relatively inexpensive
to take out a mortgage. The lower the interest
rate, the less you actually pay for your
house and the sooner you can pay the mortgage
off. Our loan calculator can show you how
different interest rates affect the total
cost of your mortgage and the time it takes
to retire it.
5. You’ll be able to use the equity
in your home for low-cost loans for other
purposes. You can access the paid-up
equity you accumulate in your home in the
form of a home equity loan or a home equity
line of credit. Because they are secured
by your house, home equity loans and lines
of credit generally carry a lower interest
rate than other types of consumer loans,
such as auto loans. The interest on them
are generally tax-deductible.
6. You’ll have the stability and emotional
security of owning your own home. No
more worrying about dictatorial or negligent
landlords, rent increases or the possibility
your building will be sold from underneath
you.. You’ll be able to live in your house
as long as you like, fix your monthly payments
for as long as 30 years and you’ll be the
one in charge.
7. You’ll be able to redecorate and
renovate any way you like, any time you
like. Rules about the paint colors you
can use will be a thing of the past. And
you’ll be able to tear out walls, install
a powder room and make any other improvements
you want.
8. You get a home to call your own instead
of paying rent on someone else's mortgage.
You can have a piece of land that you can
actually call your own.
9. You’ll be able to become a neighborhood
and a community. When you’re a homeowner,
you’ll get to know your neighbors, participate
in yard sales, meet potential baby-sitters
and play Saturday-morning touch football
in the park.
10. You’ll have a greater voice in community
affairs. Local homeowners generally
have more clout – individually and through
ratepayer’s associations – when it comes
to development proposals, school issues,
changes to traffic control and routing and
the like. Because renters tend to be more
transient than homeowners, they have less
influence on policymakers.
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