irvinehomeowner
Well-known member
@Irvine Dream:
Just pull the trigger and live by me.
Just pull the trigger and live by me.
USCTrojanCPA said:Perspective said:Well, at these $1M+ price levels, and the types of households that buy them, the DTI calc is just a snapshot of any given moment in time. They'll have years when they receive large bonuses, or sell a large amount of stock, and their income far exceeds their salaries. They'll have years when one spouse isn't working. Their DTIs could fluctuate greater than ten percentage points over a decade.
A related question you rarely hear, is what is a reasonable percentage of your net worth to put into a downpayment? It's a fair question when you're buying a $1M+ house.
It also depends on your investment risk tolerance too. I don't want to be house rich and cash poor. Rates are so low that you should borrow as much as you can and keep as much liquidity as possible.
Bullsback said:That was another concern.bones said:Ha. There coulda been a TI street in Arcadia. We almost bought there too. I was ok with the tiny lots but not the price. My other half was ok with the price but not the tiny lots. We were both not ok with the buyer makeup - at least in the early phases.
Perspective said:USCTrojanCPA said:Perspective said:Well, at these $1M+ price levels, and the types of households that buy them, the DTI calc is just a snapshot of any given moment in time. They'll have years when they receive large bonuses, or sell a large amount of stock, and their income far exceeds their salaries. They'll have years when one spouse isn't working. Their DTIs could fluctuate greater than ten percentage points over a decade.
A related question you rarely hear, is what is a reasonable percentage of your net worth to put into a downpayment? It's a fair question when you're buying a $1M+ house.
It also depends on your investment risk tolerance too. I don't want to be house rich and cash poor. Rates are so low that you should borrow as much as you can and keep as much liquidity as possible.
Optionality is valuable. It's one reason I briefly considered a 90% LTV loan with a quarter point premium. A 3.75% mortgage rate for a household earning $200K+ is a low 2s effective rate considering IRS/FTB taxes (at least on the first $1M of mortgage indebtedness). It's hard to imagine inflation alone failing to average 2% minimally over the next decade and beyond.