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.
 
In our area there are a number of people who bought long ago, now live on a fixed income, and cannot afford to take care of their houses properly.

Have never owned a house on my own, always rented a place or lived on base. Have lived here nearly eleven years, moved from a house we lived in for almost fifteen years.

Wonder if you ever really own a property. Need to pay property taxes, which can be very high. There's maintenance and repairs. You may want to make upgrades, costing money and time. Neighborhood can go to shit and take your house's value down quickly. If that's your thing, cool. I'll pass.
 
I knew it was a Canadian article before I even clicked on it.

Should have guessed it was from the Toronto Star too because the whole premise is gobsmackingly stupid.

Renters don't have to get their hands dirty? What about when they have to move all their shit because the landlord is kicking them out for a "family member" or renovictions?

More free cash flow? Sure, except you don't have fixed housing costs to count on because rents can be raised or you can be evicted.

If rent is cheap compared to owning, sure, it might be a good deal. But that's not the case right now. Rents are crazy expensive and good places are hard to find in the cites you'd want to live in. Maybe you luck out and get a great deal but the landlord is eventually going to figure out you're getting too good a deal and work to remedy that situation.

Because it is an eventuality that if you own a house long enough, the basement will experience a flood of some sort,

No. Just no. Maybe if your home was built a century ago or on a flood plain but most people I know have never had a flood in their basement .
 
No. Just no. Maybe if your home was built a century ago or on a flood plain but most people I know have never had a flood in their basement .
How about general water damage? Washing machines and plumbing do leak, burst, and sometimes goes unnoticed until it's an actual flood if you aren't in the basement every day. Not sure which would be worse then, living in the marshy south or pipes freezing in the north.
 
How about general water damage? Washing machines and plumbing do leak, burst, and sometimes goes unnoticed until it's an actual flood if you aren't in the basement every day. Not sure which would be worse then, living in the marshy south or pipes freezing in the north.
Do you really believe that washing machines and plumbing leak, burst and go unnoticed?
 
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Do you really believe that washing machines and plumbing leak, burst and go unnoticed?
Yes, I know people it happened to. You can be at work and not know a pipe is burst until several hours later when a work shift ends. I'd wish it on Keffals but they rent like the rootless trash they are.
 
No. Just no. Maybe if your home was built a century ago or on a flood plain but most people I know have never had a flood in their basement .
Half a century ago, maybe. Some housing was built like shit by people who didn't care, and there were barely any standards compared to today.
 
Yes, I know people it happened to. You can be at work and not know a pipe is burst until several hours later when a work shift ends. I'd wish it on Keffals but they rent like the rootless trash they are.
Who am I to argue with your experience? It seems that you know a lot of people who had random plumbing failures. Do you know why it failed? My anecdote is the only failure I know of was me - I didn’t winterize in time one year and had to replace the spigot and some copper to it.
 
One was a bad sump-pump/sub pump(sp?) that forced water down a sewer drain, but it failed and wasn't noticed for about a day, and flooded a partially used basement and ruined the second-hand furniture and electronics downstairs, it was wading deep. The other was a winter relative up north where there was freezing temps and they didn't leave faucets trickling in all rooms and a pipe burst in the wall, but while they were out of the house, and it flowed down into the basement and pooled there. I've heard the home prevention fix is having a trench dug in the basement with waterproofing on the brick, but sounds more expensive than just repairing the damage & just hoping it doesn't happen.

Null is going to love being a homeowner in America, shit just constantly breaks and needs work done like a shitty 5+ year old server blade and out-of-date unlicensed software.
 
As time goes on, I'm becoming increasingly sympathetic with Communism. Not because I believe in it as more than I used to, but because these people will have their heads on pikes under a socialist regime.
I'm fine with a mix of Sorel's syndicalism, Mussolini's fascism and Lenin's thoughts. Political violence and permanent revolutionary action is the only choice left.
 
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eat the bugs, live in a pod, own nothing and be happy.

High command has decided to cull the slave classes by 50% this year, together we can fight climate change! Please report to your designed lottery center citizen to see if you are eligible for a life permit renewal.
 
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Property taxes are a bitch, and local ordinances on what you can build and do on your property and how do really make you question how much of anything you really own, and I won’t lie, being ultimately responsible for every system in your house working is daunting at times, and a pain in the ass when your basement is flooded and the power goes down and a tree goes down on your driveway all at once. But fuck if it doesn’t feel good on some primal level to just go dig a hole for the hell of it. Or (if you’re in a free state and have enough land) go magdump some empty cans off your back deck. Or raise chickens, plant a garden, set off fireworks, cut down a tree, go camping or just hang out outside somewhere no one can make you leave is pretty damn nice.
 
How about general water damage? Washing machines and plumbing do leak, burst, and sometimes goes unnoticed until it's an actual flood if you aren't in the basement every day. Not sure which would be worse then, living in the marshy south or pipes freezing in the north.

That was my situation. Main water pipe into the house spontaneously developed a hole about the size of an eraser on a pencil in the basement, producing a constant stream of water that formed a nice parabolic arc about 4 feet high. Not enough water pressure loss to be noticed. By the time I needed to go into the basement to get something, this situation had been going on for an unknown amount of time. All I know is that when I went to enter the basement I was met with 6 inches of standing water that covered the entire floor area of the basement. This, of course, triggered a flaming landfill of shit that took nearly a month to resolve and probably took years off my life. My insurance ended up covering the cost involved in remediating all the damage, but I was still out all the money from the time I had to take off of work to deal with the fucking disaster.
 
With an ever increasing retirement crisis in America the fact that a good amount of older people own homes is what keeps them afloat.

When most Americans aren't saving enough for later years, how the hell will they afford to pay rent? Home ownership is a crucial block for the majority of Americans to retire and not be in poverty.
 
Talked to my mortgage/loan/investment guy at the bank last week, said he was very busy. 'Investments?' I asked. 'No' says he, 'loans mostly'. Also said a lot of people went to the bank of Mum and Dad for an extra couple of hun to buy a better/bigger house when prices were rising. They took out home equity lines of credit whose interest rates fluctuate and a lot of people are struggling to make payments now rates are up. There are many houses near me which did not sell last year- easy to spot as the photos in the listings have trees witch are leaved out and their veggie gardens are mature.

Renting would be the sensible option here right now.
 
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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.

This is not entirely true. I've lived in so many places throughout my life. This is the first rental I've ever had where they fix anything in a timely manner. Growing up I remember it was my grandfather and uncle that had to fix things. Because the landlord would just ignore maintenance. It took two years to fix the huge hole in the third floor roof in the place we lived the longest. And they never fixed the plumbing or replaced the back door. It fell off the hinges. They did replace the back steps when they fell apart. But that took awhile too. The plumbing was so bad. To take a shower you had to turn on the pipe from the basement then put a bucket under the pipe and try to finish before the bucket filled.

There are situations where you are afraid to rock the boat with the landlord. So you just pay for the repairs yourself. In lower income areas you will find way more crooked landlords but you can't afford to move and thus you are stuck. So you've probably got some immigrant guys in the neighborhood that will work for cheap. That's usually your best bet if you don't have anyone in the family that can help.

However, renting is not a bad thing. It may work out better for some people. Not everyone is going to be able to afford to buy a house. If your budget is small then you'll probably save money if you can get a decent rental price somewhere. Not every apartment is a $2500 shoebox. It's just that the competition for the cheaper places that aren't in the nastiest hoods is pretty stiff. Everyone wants them. Location itself is also important. Especially if you rely on public transportation or are unable to travel far.
 
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