Quote:
Originally Posted by AZ_Engineer
Anyone who thinks you're stupid for buying this way is not someone whose opinion you should value anyway. My bigger concern for you is buying at all right now. Traditionally, the median price of a home in a stable economic environment is around 3X the median income. Right now the median price of a home in the Phoenix market is $275,000 while the median income in Arizona is under $40,000. That's over a 6:1 ratio, or twice what the historical data suggests it should be. Unless we're all expecting our salaries to double in the next year or two, the only option is for prices to come down by around HALF what they currently are. In this case, he who hesitates will make out like a bandit. Keep renting.
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While I agree with most of what you have posted, I think it might be more effective to compare the median home price in Phoenix to the median income in Phoenix, not the entire state. Only because I suspect the median income in Phoenix may be higher than the overall state.
I don't know the current data but from 2000 census data reported in the Phoenix Wikipedia entry:
"The median income for a household in the city was $41,207, and the median income for a family was $46,467."
If you pick just Phoenix, the median home price looks more like $225,000 in these graphs:
http://www.arizonarealestatenotebook...-price-graphs/
which is still a 5:1 ratio, which is problematic for most people.
foma - Stick with your plan of 20% down and a fixed-rate mortgage. Speaking from experience, buy far less house than you can afford if possible. I've owned 2 houses and both times we bought for about 50% for we "qualified for". Make extra principal payments if possible.