CN So you may never own a home. Here’s why maybe that’s ... a good thing? - While it’s easy to feel you have to make home ownership a goal in life, it’s not for everyone, Lesley-Anne Scorgie writes.


The federal government recently announced changes to the borrowing limits on the RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan and introduced 30-year amortized mortgages for first-time homebuyers purchasing new homes, moves meant to make home ownership more affordable.

These measures don’t bring unreachable housing prices down, nor do they bump up household salaries required to support higher mortgage interest rates. In the most expensive markets in Canada, including the GTA, households need to earn well over $215,000 to buy a very basic property — we’re not talking yards, views and pools.

While it’s easy to feel owning a home is a life goal, it might not be a bad thing to consider forgetting it altogether. Here are some benefits of being a lifelong renter:

There’s geographic flexibility in being a renter​

You can consider working in places where you’ll be paid the highest for the kind of work you love doing. Homeowners are literally bound to their properties and thus their local work opportunities. If higher wages aren’t the key driver for moving, maybe a better lifestyle is. Moving closer to nature, or to a location that’s better for your mental health and maybe even your pocketbook, is always on the table for a renter. You can end your lease, pack up and plant roots elsewhere.

You don’t have to get your hands dirty as a renter​

Life can be less complicated. You won’t have to spend time, money and energy repairing a leaky roof, fixing a cabinet, worrying about nearby zoning changes or stressing about higher utility costs or mortgage payments. And just imagine all the extra time you’d have to invest in growing your income or playing with your kids, if you weren’t always DIY-ing another house project.

You might end up with a lot more free cash flow​

The total costs of renting (rent, utilities and tenant insurance) can be way less than the costs of home ownership (mortgage, utilities, taxes, maintenance, repairs, insurance, etc.) for a nearly identical place. Try running the numbers on your scenario. Here’s how I look at it.

If, for example, you buy a condo for $550,000, and put 20 per cent down (that means you need to come up with $110,000 plus closing costs), and you take out a 25-year mortgage at 5.3 per cent, the monthly payments are about $2,650. I like using CMHC’s mortgage payment calculator, btw.

If condo fees are $500, taxes are $200, insurance is $100 and utilities (hydro is commonly paid even in condos) are $100, plus a small reserve fund for future repairs of $100 are tallied up to $1,000, that will bring the total costs to run that property to $3,650 per month.

A comparable rental might cost $2,200 per month in total ($2,050 for rent and another $150 for utilities and insurance), and you don’t have to come up with a big down payment or closing costs.
This comparison might reveal you’ll have a lot more cash flow than a homeowner. That money could be used for adventures, travel, debt reduction, savings and more diverse investment activities.

Less debt as a renter

Homeowners often find themselves in need of fast cash, and use a home equity line of credit to “borrow” against the equity they have in their home. Homeowners just need to cover the interest, typically, but don’t necessarily have to pay the principal money back until they sell the home. Sounds nice, right? Think again — many owners have basically turned their homes into ATM machines, scooping out huge portions of equity for roof repairs, renos, debt consolidations and car purchases, and have no plans to rebuild that equity. Many hope for higher appreciation on their homes to build equity (a risky proposition) by the time they sell, rather than paying down their mortgage debt (a conservative way to build wealth).

The upside for renters? They don’t have access to these loans to begin with.

If after reading this you’re still feeling bad when someone a lot older than you says, “You’ll never build equity by being a renter,” know that you can create an almost equal playing field financially by saving and investing more. Some renters like to sock away the difference in value between rent versus the full cost of home ownership, on top of their regular savings. Others take a more balanced approach. A really good financial planner or money coach can prepare a long-term financial projection, and help get this money working for you.
 
They're not even trying to hide it anymore. As someone who grew up in a family of renters these are weak arguments. First, no matter where you live you're going to have clean or fix something. It's inevitable and renters don't have a get out of jail free card to have it fix. If you wanted to move, you're shit out luck because that someplace else might not have affordable homes or apartments for rent, and you could easily find yourself in a dump where your neighbors suck, people steal your mail or fuck with vehicles, and somehow you're supposed to swallow your pride that this it worth it. No thanks. I rather be a backwards country hick who owns my home and land. Thank you very much.
 
Not everything has a financial return tied to it. Why not lease a car and never actually own it? Some people like to own things and look after them, so you can find arguments about home ownership if you want to; but if you like decorating your place and being answerable only to yourself, you aren't going to find that freedom as a renter.

I may not get every dollar out I throw into my home, but that's not why I do it, I do it because its my place where I live and it's a good spend.

Remember that Bike you polished every week as a kid, and you had a nice seat and handle bars because it looked incredible? Same thing. I don't have to wear nice clothes either, but I choose to.

Having home security is something everyone wants, just it might not matter when you ar young and don't think ahead. And if it is something you dont want (security of owning your own home) then I can't help but feel you've bought the bullshit and are used to essentially, living with insecurity.
 
Yeah, but this article leaves out the most important drawback about renting

'Well sorry but not sorry, I know you've lived here for 10 years and caused no problems at all but I realized if I kick you out I can jack the rent up by $1000, so bye bye'

Or

'Well I sold the house and the new owners plan on tearing it down and building a new house so bye bye.'
 
I have known exactly two people in my real life who preferred renting apartments to owning a home.
Both men, both very nerdy, indoorsy and hated the concept of yardwork.
Also very responsibility-shy. Neither one wanted to do anything but the most basic care of anything.
They were both the types to buy the cheapest used car on the lot, drive it until it burst into flames, junk it and get another cheap used car.
We won't discuss their social lives.

Nothing wrong with renting if it's something you want to do. Owning has benefits too, and it should be an option for those who want it.

Why is it that every time I read an article about the "live in a pod/eat the bugs" stuff I feel like I'm being distracted from something else that's more important?
 
I'll support whatever regime promises to kill the largest number of these people and their sycophants. We can clean up that regime afterwards if necessary as well.
My mentality when it comes to Chinks currently colonizing the Nigger continent. Go ahead I say, try as they might even the Chinks won't be able to civilize them - and once a gang of Shitskin randos blow up a Chinese oil refinery, it will be Sickle Cell 2.0 time. I'm eager to see the Chinese/Nigger culture clashes.
 
I would suggest a few things to anyone that wants to own a house. Anyone thinking of owning a house should make a point of keeping up with the shit you have to do on a regular basis. If you don't, you can easily find yourself in a shitstorm that will cost a significant amount of money to fix.

Also, if you store shit in your basement, make sure you use those plastic bins, and ensure the bottoms aren't damaged. Don't use cardboard boxes. Because it is an eventuality that if you own a house long enough, the basement will experience a flood of some sort, and all the shit in cardboard boxes will be ruined, while the shit in the plastic bins will be just fine.

Along the same lines, make a point of visually checking every room in your house at least once a week. You may not need to go into your basement for a week or two, but your basement may have a surprise waiting for you that you'd wish you'd found a week ago. The amount of time it will take is minimal and it can prevent a small problem from turning into a total fucking disaster.
 
I love how all these articles - and they’ve been around for a couple decades - just assume the landlord is sucking up the cost of property insurance, maintenance, capital (mortgage) costs, etc and setting the renter free of such worries. Idiocy.

E: I get MATI every time I read one of these. How the fuck do you think it’s better to rent than own? Lease than buy? Fucking idiots. Guess I’m off to buy more bank stocks.
 
"Why live? Living is complicated and it has hardships. Experts agree that living is overrated and people not living is a good thing."

There's no way you can work eight hours a day as a paid propagandist for the most depraved evil people on earth and not have it weigh on your soul.
Beats me too, I think about this a lot.
 
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