famdizel
New Member
Hello all,
Last year we put a deposit on new home in Milton that is scheduled to close in a few months from now. I was completely clueless at the time, motivated by wanted the biggest house I can afford and encouraged by the idea real estate prices will always go up. Looking back now, I feel that I acted foolishly and could have made better choices. I'm concerned we've stretched ourselves thin and would become house poor.
We rent in Mississauga, both work in Toronto and have a new born baby, My wife is on mat leave so our combined family income at this moment is 90K.
The house cost %380,000, Our mortgage is $304,000 at current variable rates amortized over 40 years. Bad idea I know but we don't plan on making minimum payments. Our payment model is based accelerated by-weekly payments @ 6% interest amortized over 25 years. This would give us a +2% buffer in case interest rates go up while allowing us to decrease our payments in the event of an unexpected expense.
Now in the event inerest rates rise higher than we factored and our incomes don't improve, we would be screwed. And if home prices fall we would be stuck having to pay more than the property is worth. So where is the silver lining here?
Last year we put a deposit on new home in Milton that is scheduled to close in a few months from now. I was completely clueless at the time, motivated by wanted the biggest house I can afford and encouraged by the idea real estate prices will always go up. Looking back now, I feel that I acted foolishly and could have made better choices. I'm concerned we've stretched ourselves thin and would become house poor.
We rent in Mississauga, both work in Toronto and have a new born baby, My wife is on mat leave so our combined family income at this moment is 90K.
The house cost %380,000, Our mortgage is $304,000 at current variable rates amortized over 40 years. Bad idea I know but we don't plan on making minimum payments. Our payment model is based accelerated by-weekly payments @ 6% interest amortized over 25 years. This would give us a +2% buffer in case interest rates go up while allowing us to decrease our payments in the event of an unexpected expense.
Now in the event inerest rates rise higher than we factored and our incomes don't improve, we would be screwed. And if home prices fall we would be stuck having to pay more than the property is worth. So where is the silver lining here?