Owning a house is for cucks
>>62058794rent is due tomorrow rentoid
>corrugated iron>breezeblocksDamn, at least in Jamaica I didn't have to pay 141k for this.
>>62058794This, house coin baaad saar, buy rental coins blody!
>>62058785>Dude! Just take the type of housing that has been a byword for being a FAILURE for nearly a century!How compelling.
>>62058785Now show the median price before covid and the great BRRRR
>>62058785a mobile home for near 150k??!!
>>62058785Make sure you own the land its on. There are a lot of companies going around jacking the rents up.
I live around Tampa (Pinellas county) and they are literally demolishing all the mobile home parks to build these copy paste apartment buildings.Apparently they say mobile homes don't hold up well in hurricane season! (theyve been standing for 50 years no problem though, pay that no mind)The real explanation is Florida is changing thanks to all the new yorkers etc moving in. The old folks retirement mobile home snowbird community is from a bygone era
>>62058804So is lot rent, Trailer Trash.
You don't own the land for starters and ask grok about what your insurance payment is for a mobile home in Tampa.
>>62058785Affordable home prices are essential for the society to be healthy and thriving. What's happening now is a sign of the collapse.
>>62058804Property tax is due, hoomer.
>>62058785The problem is land, specifically the cost of local infrastructure rather than housing itself. I can easily find used mobile homes ready for transport at 1-5k from the 1980's and 1990's. The costly problem is where to put them. If you think trailer parks are a safe option, your (mostly) wrong. The parks lease out space now for between $400-$1000 per month. You in the end you still pay rent and utilities. The only way to win is to own the land your house sits on. The truth is, you kind find cheap lots without any infrastructure at all. Like in forests and deserts. The problem becomes keeping your city infrastructure and your house close enough to be livable. It's possible to buy a shed and place it in the middle of nowhere to make a "1 room cabin" however to get clean water, food and power out that far on a budget is a nightmare. You'd pay more upfront going off grid than you would if you lived in the dead center of your town.>>62059191Depends on location and scale, I've seen 2000's 3 bed 2 bath splits in a retirement community go for about that much.>>62058906If you own the land, then you can save your rent or mortgage payment while you live in the FAILURE HOUSE to build a shiny new one without giving the bank squat. When your done you can sell it to old folks who want to downsize or rent it out. It's a stepping stone to your dream house, not the final destination.>>62059374>What about insurance? Or refinancing options?If your asset doesn't have a high value, why spend the money to ensure it? I understand you might want to ensure a large purchase, but you'd want to ensure what's inside your home, rather than the home itself. I'd suggest Agreed Value Coverage for assets like art, antiques, and memorabilia. Then put the rest into tangible goods that don't spoil like metals and jewels.
>>62058785>lot rent>55+ community
>>62058906>you can't live below your means and live in a trailer because normies will think you're a failureYou deserve to be a debtslave