Hi ladies,
Just a bit of bavkground.. My husband and I have been looking for our dream home for a little while now and originally had our budget set firm at $400,000. Being idiots we let the real estate agent show us a house in a higher bracket and we have fallen in love with a house being marketed at $469,000. We are thinking of making an offer but I am a little worried as it will be an additional $13,000 from our savings for the deposit. While we would be able to meet the mortgage repayments I'm just a little bit concerned about our soon to be diminished savings account. If we were to pay the deposit for the house we would be left with $5,000 in savings. What are everyone's thoughts on how much of a nest egg to have? We both work and I will have a year paid maternity leave but we have always had savings in case of unexpected vet bills, car bills etc.
Just interested in everyone's thoughts on savings buffers?
Re: Budgeting and savings accounts
We've always held very firm on the 6-12 months' expenses in savings. I'm way more of a saver than my husband is, and it makes me feel very comfortable to know that we could both be out of work for a year and still cover rent, bills, food, etc. I'd say it'd more depend on how long it would take you to build your savings back up? Those damn real estate agents will get you! We're about to start house hunting and I'm having to slap my hand everytime it tries to search for stuff above our arbitrary limit "just to see".
ETA: By nest egg, do you mean retirement savings or just emergency savings?
@pandadair for nest egg I mean just unexpected bills etc. we have superannuation for our retirement and we currently pay extra from our fortnightly pays so we will have extra to retire with.
My own bias is just creeping in and saying "What if something completely unexpected happens right after you buy?" What if (seriously God forbid) something comes up with the pregnancy that precludes you from working. I don't know how the laws work up there, so many you would be covered for pregnancy and still get mat leave. What if your husband is laid off and it takes longer than expected to find something with similar pay? What if what if what if. Totally depends on your risk tolerance, which I obviously have none of.
We keep about six months worth of living expenses in our account at all times. Even that makes me itchy and I wish it was more.
@smittysmiles we have been renting for 9 years and have always said we would move into our own house before we had kids. We want to be able to paint a nursery and plan a games room without having to worry about landlords. So excited its finally happening
2011: FSH 13.3 & E 99; AMH 0.54 2nd FSH 6.2 E 40's AFC: 8
BFP from Clomid/IUI ~ Pre-e and IUGR during pregnancy ~ DS born 9/4/12
Feb./March 2013: AMH less than 0.16 (undectable) and AFC = 4;
BFP from supps ~ DS#2 due May 2014
May 2014 January Siggy Challenge:
2011: FSH 13.3 & E 99; AMH 0.54 2nd FSH 6.2 E 40's AFC: 8
BFP from Clomid/IUI ~ Pre-e and IUGR during pregnancy ~ DS born 9/4/12
Feb./March 2013: AMH less than 0.16 (undectable) and AFC = 4;
BFP from supps ~ DS#2 due May 2014
May 2014 January Siggy Challenge:
OR you can get two mortgages. In the US you have to pay PMI if your loan is more than 80% of the value of the home. If you're combining two mortgages, you can avoid PMI. But you'd have to get both lenders to agree to the others terms in order to get approved for both.
There are ways around it. Or you can do exactly what you (and my DH and I) did and refinance once you have enough equity.
I have never had a client use a VA loan (not because they're bad- I just haven't had any veterans) so I'm not as familiar with them. From what I can remember from real estate school though, it's a really great option, and you might as well take advantage. If you're okay with a smaller home than you maybe could afford otherwise, I think that's a really awesome financial move. You might even be able to save and have more for an even larger down payment in 5-7 years? I would have taken advantage if that was an option for us.
My husband and I have never put down 20% on a home. We've done an FHA loan on both of our houses, and then refinanced after we built up enough equity to refinance into a conventional loan to get rid of PMI. Both times we've been able to refinance within a year with only minor upgrades to our houses. But we bought a foreclosure the first time, and got an unbelievable deal on our current house. So just taking ownership upped our equity almost immediately.
So if you don't want to do a VA loan, there's a bit more wiggle room with an FHA loan, or a conventional loan, without putting up 20% immediately.
No shit...this all day long.
2011: FSH 13.3 & E 99; AMH 0.54 2nd FSH 6.2 E 40's AFC: 8
BFP from Clomid/IUI ~ Pre-e and IUGR during pregnancy ~ DS born 9/4/12
Feb./March 2013: AMH less than 0.16 (undectable) and AFC = 4;
BFP from supps ~ DS#2 due May 2014
May 2014 January Siggy Challenge:
I equate them to the posts that will crop up after we have the babies where people are bitching about being fat and mention their actual weight. Bitches will all be, "I'm so fucking fat I'm depressed I can't believe I'm 140lbs" and I'm all like "Fuck you"
FWIW we make a good living, and I was still like "wow, 100,000 dollar down payment, half a million dollar house" I don't need to get that up and close with you.
Edited bump burp