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How can I budget to build up a down payment for a house over the course of a year?


Saving for a down payment on a new house, a few years out. Where do we put our money next?First Time Home Buyer - How much down payment? Where to go for Mortgage?Buying a house, how much should my down payment be?Home buying vs InvestingThe cost of cleaning the house that we rented far exceeds the security deposit. Should we bother?Tax and financial implications of sharing my apartment with my partnerReceiving $30k from mother for house down paymentNo down payment for a houseIncrease bid on home in exchange for down payment/creditsWhat type of investment is best suited for a 1-year investment on a down payment?













1















I'm currently looking to buy a house in one year - my lease will be expiring, I'll have the time to build up a savings, and we'll have the time to research and find the exact house we want - we've already seen several that we would like, and we both agree that we want to move out as soon as possible, though right now with only $500 in Savings (total), that's not really feasible.



I've paid off my student loan, so my major outstanding obligations right now are:




  • Car Payments $187/mo + $66/mo for insurance and ~$30 for Gas ($283/mo)


  • Electric $100/mo


  • High-speed Internet, $65/mo


  • Phone $135/mo Phone


  • Rent $1,350/mo.


  • Food bill ~$100-$150/week ($500/mo)


  • $50 a week or so for luxuries like ordering out or going to a restaurant ($200/mo)



So my total monthly expenses are roughly $2633, not including any emergencies.



My take home is $1950 every 2 weeks (So roughly $3900/mo after taxes, health insurance, et cetera from my work). This is our only steady income, with some minor income every month or two from my wife doing art commissions.



We're looking for a 3 Bedroom house with a finished basement and modern kitchen. We're willing to settle for 2 Bedrooms if there is also a finished basement, so long as the upstairs has a decent size to it. We'd prefer a Ranch house too. In our area, this looks to run us between $200,000 - $250,000.



What can we do to save up a down payment and cover closing costs for this kind of home purchase? We'd prefer to do it in a year if possible, but any advice would be appreciated - and if we can't, we're willing to downsize to get out of our current apartment next year.










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Easy solution: Spend less, save more. The rest is just details.

    – Bob Baerker
    1 hour ago











  • Please sum up your expenses so we don't have to.

    – RonJohn
    1 hour ago
















1















I'm currently looking to buy a house in one year - my lease will be expiring, I'll have the time to build up a savings, and we'll have the time to research and find the exact house we want - we've already seen several that we would like, and we both agree that we want to move out as soon as possible, though right now with only $500 in Savings (total), that's not really feasible.



I've paid off my student loan, so my major outstanding obligations right now are:




  • Car Payments $187/mo + $66/mo for insurance and ~$30 for Gas ($283/mo)


  • Electric $100/mo


  • High-speed Internet, $65/mo


  • Phone $135/mo Phone


  • Rent $1,350/mo.


  • Food bill ~$100-$150/week ($500/mo)


  • $50 a week or so for luxuries like ordering out or going to a restaurant ($200/mo)



So my total monthly expenses are roughly $2633, not including any emergencies.



My take home is $1950 every 2 weeks (So roughly $3900/mo after taxes, health insurance, et cetera from my work). This is our only steady income, with some minor income every month or two from my wife doing art commissions.



We're looking for a 3 Bedroom house with a finished basement and modern kitchen. We're willing to settle for 2 Bedrooms if there is also a finished basement, so long as the upstairs has a decent size to it. We'd prefer a Ranch house too. In our area, this looks to run us between $200,000 - $250,000.



What can we do to save up a down payment and cover closing costs for this kind of home purchase? We'd prefer to do it in a year if possible, but any advice would be appreciated - and if we can't, we're willing to downsize to get out of our current apartment next year.










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Easy solution: Spend less, save more. The rest is just details.

    – Bob Baerker
    1 hour ago











  • Please sum up your expenses so we don't have to.

    – RonJohn
    1 hour ago














1












1








1








I'm currently looking to buy a house in one year - my lease will be expiring, I'll have the time to build up a savings, and we'll have the time to research and find the exact house we want - we've already seen several that we would like, and we both agree that we want to move out as soon as possible, though right now with only $500 in Savings (total), that's not really feasible.



I've paid off my student loan, so my major outstanding obligations right now are:




  • Car Payments $187/mo + $66/mo for insurance and ~$30 for Gas ($283/mo)


  • Electric $100/mo


  • High-speed Internet, $65/mo


  • Phone $135/mo Phone


  • Rent $1,350/mo.


  • Food bill ~$100-$150/week ($500/mo)


  • $50 a week or so for luxuries like ordering out or going to a restaurant ($200/mo)



So my total monthly expenses are roughly $2633, not including any emergencies.



My take home is $1950 every 2 weeks (So roughly $3900/mo after taxes, health insurance, et cetera from my work). This is our only steady income, with some minor income every month or two from my wife doing art commissions.



We're looking for a 3 Bedroom house with a finished basement and modern kitchen. We're willing to settle for 2 Bedrooms if there is also a finished basement, so long as the upstairs has a decent size to it. We'd prefer a Ranch house too. In our area, this looks to run us between $200,000 - $250,000.



What can we do to save up a down payment and cover closing costs for this kind of home purchase? We'd prefer to do it in a year if possible, but any advice would be appreciated - and if we can't, we're willing to downsize to get out of our current apartment next year.










share|improve this question
















I'm currently looking to buy a house in one year - my lease will be expiring, I'll have the time to build up a savings, and we'll have the time to research and find the exact house we want - we've already seen several that we would like, and we both agree that we want to move out as soon as possible, though right now with only $500 in Savings (total), that's not really feasible.



I've paid off my student loan, so my major outstanding obligations right now are:




  • Car Payments $187/mo + $66/mo for insurance and ~$30 for Gas ($283/mo)


  • Electric $100/mo


  • High-speed Internet, $65/mo


  • Phone $135/mo Phone


  • Rent $1,350/mo.


  • Food bill ~$100-$150/week ($500/mo)


  • $50 a week or so for luxuries like ordering out or going to a restaurant ($200/mo)



So my total monthly expenses are roughly $2633, not including any emergencies.



My take home is $1950 every 2 weeks (So roughly $3900/mo after taxes, health insurance, et cetera from my work). This is our only steady income, with some minor income every month or two from my wife doing art commissions.



We're looking for a 3 Bedroom house with a finished basement and modern kitchen. We're willing to settle for 2 Bedrooms if there is also a finished basement, so long as the upstairs has a decent size to it. We'd prefer a Ranch house too. In our area, this looks to run us between $200,000 - $250,000.



What can we do to save up a down payment and cover closing costs for this kind of home purchase? We'd prefer to do it in a year if possible, but any advice would be appreciated - and if we can't, we're willing to downsize to get out of our current apartment next year.







united-states savings first-time-home-buyer






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago







Zibbobz

















asked 1 hour ago









ZibbobzZibbobz

1,95022034




1,95022034








  • 2





    Easy solution: Spend less, save more. The rest is just details.

    – Bob Baerker
    1 hour ago











  • Please sum up your expenses so we don't have to.

    – RonJohn
    1 hour ago














  • 2





    Easy solution: Spend less, save more. The rest is just details.

    – Bob Baerker
    1 hour ago











  • Please sum up your expenses so we don't have to.

    – RonJohn
    1 hour ago








2




2





Easy solution: Spend less, save more. The rest is just details.

– Bob Baerker
1 hour ago





Easy solution: Spend less, save more. The rest is just details.

– Bob Baerker
1 hour ago













Please sum up your expenses so we don't have to.

– RonJohn
1 hour ago





Please sum up your expenses so we don't have to.

– RonJohn
1 hour ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















5














You list about $2500 per month in expenses (rent, utilities, etc.), and say you have $3900+ in income per month. This leaves you $1400 per month. If you add this amount to your savings every month, you will have a bit over $17,000 saved in a year.



You mention getting paid every two weeks - this usually works out to two months per year with an "extra" paycheck (3 payments fall in a single calendar month instead of the usual 2). If you stash this entire amount of extra money ($3900) with the rest of your savings, that'll get you to about $21,000 saved in a year (including the above-mentioned saving).



This is about 10% of the (lower end of the range) purchase price you're expecting. It's generally a good idea to have at least 20% as a down payment. I'd recommend the considering the following options:




  • Save as I've outlined above, but wait 2 years instead of 1 year to buy. This will allow you to save a 20% down payment (more likely to get approved for financing, not have to pay PMI)

  • Save any extra income from your wife's art commissions towards the purchase; depending on size and frequency of commissions, this could be a significant or minor acceleration.

  • Sell/trade your car and get something cheaper. Whatever cash is left over from the trade, add to your savings. Add what you would have been paying for the car each month to what you are saving for the house.

  • Buy a less expensive house.


The numbers and timeframe you've outlined may work, but depending on your credit, it might be difficult, impossible, or expensive to get financing for the purchase with the down payment you will have saved in a year. If you're set on the timeline, find a cheaper house; if you're set on the house (not a particular house, but the size/style/neighborhood/etc.), extend your timeline and save as much as possible (including downsizing on your apartment/car).






share|improve this answer

































    1















    What can we do to save up a down payment and cover closing costs for
    this kind of home purchase?




    Many people track expenses, but don't really budget. Budgeting is a great way to achieve financial goals. The best budgets, in my opinion, are known as zero-based budgets where every incoming dollar is given a specific purpose ahead of receiving it. I suggest a written/electronic budget that includes all your expenses, discretionary spending, and saving for specific purposes (emergency fund, down-payment), include expense categories like car repair/maintenance and do your best to find the average monthly spend. It doesn't need to be inflexible, you'll adjust as needed, but a written plan is more likely to be followed than simply trying to save all extra money for a house.



    If very motivated to get into a house in a year, you can cut spending to the bare essentials and increase income by taking on additional work.




    We'd prefer to do it in a year if
    possible, but any advice would be appreciated - and if we can't, we're
    willing to downsize to get out of our current apartment next year.




    Others have parsed the numbers, you could buy in a year with PMI at current income/expense levels, that's not ideal. However, it's worth evaluating the market you'll be buying into. Home prices in my area have been on a 10-year tear, waiting a year to avoid PMI can mean paying significantly more for a house. If you did buy with PMI you'd want to ensure your mortgage provider makes it easy to remove PMI without refinancing. My first home purchase was 5% down with PMI, the PMI got removed in 18 months, waiting to buy would have cost me much more than the PMI did. My situation was not typical, but it's worth considering in 'hot' markets.



    The main thing I'd caution against is buying without additional savings on hand, big things can go wrong immediately after moving in, so you need a good pile of money on hand just in case, you'd ideally have a ~6 month emergency fund and a 20% down payment.






    share|improve this answer


























    • Why track expenses without also budgeting? That makes no sense. (Not that I'm disagreeing with you...)

      – RonJohn
      4 mins ago



















    0















    • 20% of $250K is $50K.


    • 1/12 of $50K is $4,167.


    • Your monthly take-home is about $3,900.



    Basic math says that there's no way you're going to make the 20% down payment that we recommend.



    Even 5% of $250K is $12,500.



    If you're expenses are really $2,630/month, then you're saving $1,270/month which is just over $15,000.



    Add in the extra two paychecks ($1950*2=$3900) and you're just short of $20,000.



    That's good. However, there are closing costs, realtor costs (if you use a realtor), moving expenses, "make it livable" expenses, etc.



    You should probably save for two years after you ensure that you have a $2600*6 = $15,600 emergency fund.






    share|improve this answer

























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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      5














      You list about $2500 per month in expenses (rent, utilities, etc.), and say you have $3900+ in income per month. This leaves you $1400 per month. If you add this amount to your savings every month, you will have a bit over $17,000 saved in a year.



      You mention getting paid every two weeks - this usually works out to two months per year with an "extra" paycheck (3 payments fall in a single calendar month instead of the usual 2). If you stash this entire amount of extra money ($3900) with the rest of your savings, that'll get you to about $21,000 saved in a year (including the above-mentioned saving).



      This is about 10% of the (lower end of the range) purchase price you're expecting. It's generally a good idea to have at least 20% as a down payment. I'd recommend the considering the following options:




      • Save as I've outlined above, but wait 2 years instead of 1 year to buy. This will allow you to save a 20% down payment (more likely to get approved for financing, not have to pay PMI)

      • Save any extra income from your wife's art commissions towards the purchase; depending on size and frequency of commissions, this could be a significant or minor acceleration.

      • Sell/trade your car and get something cheaper. Whatever cash is left over from the trade, add to your savings. Add what you would have been paying for the car each month to what you are saving for the house.

      • Buy a less expensive house.


      The numbers and timeframe you've outlined may work, but depending on your credit, it might be difficult, impossible, or expensive to get financing for the purchase with the down payment you will have saved in a year. If you're set on the timeline, find a cheaper house; if you're set on the house (not a particular house, but the size/style/neighborhood/etc.), extend your timeline and save as much as possible (including downsizing on your apartment/car).






      share|improve this answer






























        5














        You list about $2500 per month in expenses (rent, utilities, etc.), and say you have $3900+ in income per month. This leaves you $1400 per month. If you add this amount to your savings every month, you will have a bit over $17,000 saved in a year.



        You mention getting paid every two weeks - this usually works out to two months per year with an "extra" paycheck (3 payments fall in a single calendar month instead of the usual 2). If you stash this entire amount of extra money ($3900) with the rest of your savings, that'll get you to about $21,000 saved in a year (including the above-mentioned saving).



        This is about 10% of the (lower end of the range) purchase price you're expecting. It's generally a good idea to have at least 20% as a down payment. I'd recommend the considering the following options:




        • Save as I've outlined above, but wait 2 years instead of 1 year to buy. This will allow you to save a 20% down payment (more likely to get approved for financing, not have to pay PMI)

        • Save any extra income from your wife's art commissions towards the purchase; depending on size and frequency of commissions, this could be a significant or minor acceleration.

        • Sell/trade your car and get something cheaper. Whatever cash is left over from the trade, add to your savings. Add what you would have been paying for the car each month to what you are saving for the house.

        • Buy a less expensive house.


        The numbers and timeframe you've outlined may work, but depending on your credit, it might be difficult, impossible, or expensive to get financing for the purchase with the down payment you will have saved in a year. If you're set on the timeline, find a cheaper house; if you're set on the house (not a particular house, but the size/style/neighborhood/etc.), extend your timeline and save as much as possible (including downsizing on your apartment/car).






        share|improve this answer




























          5












          5








          5







          You list about $2500 per month in expenses (rent, utilities, etc.), and say you have $3900+ in income per month. This leaves you $1400 per month. If you add this amount to your savings every month, you will have a bit over $17,000 saved in a year.



          You mention getting paid every two weeks - this usually works out to two months per year with an "extra" paycheck (3 payments fall in a single calendar month instead of the usual 2). If you stash this entire amount of extra money ($3900) with the rest of your savings, that'll get you to about $21,000 saved in a year (including the above-mentioned saving).



          This is about 10% of the (lower end of the range) purchase price you're expecting. It's generally a good idea to have at least 20% as a down payment. I'd recommend the considering the following options:




          • Save as I've outlined above, but wait 2 years instead of 1 year to buy. This will allow you to save a 20% down payment (more likely to get approved for financing, not have to pay PMI)

          • Save any extra income from your wife's art commissions towards the purchase; depending on size and frequency of commissions, this could be a significant or minor acceleration.

          • Sell/trade your car and get something cheaper. Whatever cash is left over from the trade, add to your savings. Add what you would have been paying for the car each month to what you are saving for the house.

          • Buy a less expensive house.


          The numbers and timeframe you've outlined may work, but depending on your credit, it might be difficult, impossible, or expensive to get financing for the purchase with the down payment you will have saved in a year. If you're set on the timeline, find a cheaper house; if you're set on the house (not a particular house, but the size/style/neighborhood/etc.), extend your timeline and save as much as possible (including downsizing on your apartment/car).






          share|improve this answer















          You list about $2500 per month in expenses (rent, utilities, etc.), and say you have $3900+ in income per month. This leaves you $1400 per month. If you add this amount to your savings every month, you will have a bit over $17,000 saved in a year.



          You mention getting paid every two weeks - this usually works out to two months per year with an "extra" paycheck (3 payments fall in a single calendar month instead of the usual 2). If you stash this entire amount of extra money ($3900) with the rest of your savings, that'll get you to about $21,000 saved in a year (including the above-mentioned saving).



          This is about 10% of the (lower end of the range) purchase price you're expecting. It's generally a good idea to have at least 20% as a down payment. I'd recommend the considering the following options:




          • Save as I've outlined above, but wait 2 years instead of 1 year to buy. This will allow you to save a 20% down payment (more likely to get approved for financing, not have to pay PMI)

          • Save any extra income from your wife's art commissions towards the purchase; depending on size and frequency of commissions, this could be a significant or minor acceleration.

          • Sell/trade your car and get something cheaper. Whatever cash is left over from the trade, add to your savings. Add what you would have been paying for the car each month to what you are saving for the house.

          • Buy a less expensive house.


          The numbers and timeframe you've outlined may work, but depending on your credit, it might be difficult, impossible, or expensive to get financing for the purchase with the down payment you will have saved in a year. If you're set on the timeline, find a cheaper house; if you're set on the house (not a particular house, but the size/style/neighborhood/etc.), extend your timeline and save as much as possible (including downsizing on your apartment/car).







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 1 hour ago

























          answered 1 hour ago









          yoozer8yoozer8

          2,09631123




          2,09631123

























              1















              What can we do to save up a down payment and cover closing costs for
              this kind of home purchase?




              Many people track expenses, but don't really budget. Budgeting is a great way to achieve financial goals. The best budgets, in my opinion, are known as zero-based budgets where every incoming dollar is given a specific purpose ahead of receiving it. I suggest a written/electronic budget that includes all your expenses, discretionary spending, and saving for specific purposes (emergency fund, down-payment), include expense categories like car repair/maintenance and do your best to find the average monthly spend. It doesn't need to be inflexible, you'll adjust as needed, but a written plan is more likely to be followed than simply trying to save all extra money for a house.



              If very motivated to get into a house in a year, you can cut spending to the bare essentials and increase income by taking on additional work.




              We'd prefer to do it in a year if
              possible, but any advice would be appreciated - and if we can't, we're
              willing to downsize to get out of our current apartment next year.




              Others have parsed the numbers, you could buy in a year with PMI at current income/expense levels, that's not ideal. However, it's worth evaluating the market you'll be buying into. Home prices in my area have been on a 10-year tear, waiting a year to avoid PMI can mean paying significantly more for a house. If you did buy with PMI you'd want to ensure your mortgage provider makes it easy to remove PMI without refinancing. My first home purchase was 5% down with PMI, the PMI got removed in 18 months, waiting to buy would have cost me much more than the PMI did. My situation was not typical, but it's worth considering in 'hot' markets.



              The main thing I'd caution against is buying without additional savings on hand, big things can go wrong immediately after moving in, so you need a good pile of money on hand just in case, you'd ideally have a ~6 month emergency fund and a 20% down payment.






              share|improve this answer


























              • Why track expenses without also budgeting? That makes no sense. (Not that I'm disagreeing with you...)

                – RonJohn
                4 mins ago
















              1















              What can we do to save up a down payment and cover closing costs for
              this kind of home purchase?




              Many people track expenses, but don't really budget. Budgeting is a great way to achieve financial goals. The best budgets, in my opinion, are known as zero-based budgets where every incoming dollar is given a specific purpose ahead of receiving it. I suggest a written/electronic budget that includes all your expenses, discretionary spending, and saving for specific purposes (emergency fund, down-payment), include expense categories like car repair/maintenance and do your best to find the average monthly spend. It doesn't need to be inflexible, you'll adjust as needed, but a written plan is more likely to be followed than simply trying to save all extra money for a house.



              If very motivated to get into a house in a year, you can cut spending to the bare essentials and increase income by taking on additional work.




              We'd prefer to do it in a year if
              possible, but any advice would be appreciated - and if we can't, we're
              willing to downsize to get out of our current apartment next year.




              Others have parsed the numbers, you could buy in a year with PMI at current income/expense levels, that's not ideal. However, it's worth evaluating the market you'll be buying into. Home prices in my area have been on a 10-year tear, waiting a year to avoid PMI can mean paying significantly more for a house. If you did buy with PMI you'd want to ensure your mortgage provider makes it easy to remove PMI without refinancing. My first home purchase was 5% down with PMI, the PMI got removed in 18 months, waiting to buy would have cost me much more than the PMI did. My situation was not typical, but it's worth considering in 'hot' markets.



              The main thing I'd caution against is buying without additional savings on hand, big things can go wrong immediately after moving in, so you need a good pile of money on hand just in case, you'd ideally have a ~6 month emergency fund and a 20% down payment.






              share|improve this answer


























              • Why track expenses without also budgeting? That makes no sense. (Not that I'm disagreeing with you...)

                – RonJohn
                4 mins ago














              1












              1








              1








              What can we do to save up a down payment and cover closing costs for
              this kind of home purchase?




              Many people track expenses, but don't really budget. Budgeting is a great way to achieve financial goals. The best budgets, in my opinion, are known as zero-based budgets where every incoming dollar is given a specific purpose ahead of receiving it. I suggest a written/electronic budget that includes all your expenses, discretionary spending, and saving for specific purposes (emergency fund, down-payment), include expense categories like car repair/maintenance and do your best to find the average monthly spend. It doesn't need to be inflexible, you'll adjust as needed, but a written plan is more likely to be followed than simply trying to save all extra money for a house.



              If very motivated to get into a house in a year, you can cut spending to the bare essentials and increase income by taking on additional work.




              We'd prefer to do it in a year if
              possible, but any advice would be appreciated - and if we can't, we're
              willing to downsize to get out of our current apartment next year.




              Others have parsed the numbers, you could buy in a year with PMI at current income/expense levels, that's not ideal. However, it's worth evaluating the market you'll be buying into. Home prices in my area have been on a 10-year tear, waiting a year to avoid PMI can mean paying significantly more for a house. If you did buy with PMI you'd want to ensure your mortgage provider makes it easy to remove PMI without refinancing. My first home purchase was 5% down with PMI, the PMI got removed in 18 months, waiting to buy would have cost me much more than the PMI did. My situation was not typical, but it's worth considering in 'hot' markets.



              The main thing I'd caution against is buying without additional savings on hand, big things can go wrong immediately after moving in, so you need a good pile of money on hand just in case, you'd ideally have a ~6 month emergency fund and a 20% down payment.






              share|improve this answer
















              What can we do to save up a down payment and cover closing costs for
              this kind of home purchase?




              Many people track expenses, but don't really budget. Budgeting is a great way to achieve financial goals. The best budgets, in my opinion, are known as zero-based budgets where every incoming dollar is given a specific purpose ahead of receiving it. I suggest a written/electronic budget that includes all your expenses, discretionary spending, and saving for specific purposes (emergency fund, down-payment), include expense categories like car repair/maintenance and do your best to find the average monthly spend. It doesn't need to be inflexible, you'll adjust as needed, but a written plan is more likely to be followed than simply trying to save all extra money for a house.



              If very motivated to get into a house in a year, you can cut spending to the bare essentials and increase income by taking on additional work.




              We'd prefer to do it in a year if
              possible, but any advice would be appreciated - and if we can't, we're
              willing to downsize to get out of our current apartment next year.




              Others have parsed the numbers, you could buy in a year with PMI at current income/expense levels, that's not ideal. However, it's worth evaluating the market you'll be buying into. Home prices in my area have been on a 10-year tear, waiting a year to avoid PMI can mean paying significantly more for a house. If you did buy with PMI you'd want to ensure your mortgage provider makes it easy to remove PMI without refinancing. My first home purchase was 5% down with PMI, the PMI got removed in 18 months, waiting to buy would have cost me much more than the PMI did. My situation was not typical, but it's worth considering in 'hot' markets.



              The main thing I'd caution against is buying without additional savings on hand, big things can go wrong immediately after moving in, so you need a good pile of money on hand just in case, you'd ideally have a ~6 month emergency fund and a 20% down payment.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited 27 mins ago

























              answered 49 mins ago









              Hart COHart CO

              32.2k57591




              32.2k57591













              • Why track expenses without also budgeting? That makes no sense. (Not that I'm disagreeing with you...)

                – RonJohn
                4 mins ago



















              • Why track expenses without also budgeting? That makes no sense. (Not that I'm disagreeing with you...)

                – RonJohn
                4 mins ago

















              Why track expenses without also budgeting? That makes no sense. (Not that I'm disagreeing with you...)

              – RonJohn
              4 mins ago





              Why track expenses without also budgeting? That makes no sense. (Not that I'm disagreeing with you...)

              – RonJohn
              4 mins ago











              0















              • 20% of $250K is $50K.


              • 1/12 of $50K is $4,167.


              • Your monthly take-home is about $3,900.



              Basic math says that there's no way you're going to make the 20% down payment that we recommend.



              Even 5% of $250K is $12,500.



              If you're expenses are really $2,630/month, then you're saving $1,270/month which is just over $15,000.



              Add in the extra two paychecks ($1950*2=$3900) and you're just short of $20,000.



              That's good. However, there are closing costs, realtor costs (if you use a realtor), moving expenses, "make it livable" expenses, etc.



              You should probably save for two years after you ensure that you have a $2600*6 = $15,600 emergency fund.






              share|improve this answer






























                0















                • 20% of $250K is $50K.


                • 1/12 of $50K is $4,167.


                • Your monthly take-home is about $3,900.



                Basic math says that there's no way you're going to make the 20% down payment that we recommend.



                Even 5% of $250K is $12,500.



                If you're expenses are really $2,630/month, then you're saving $1,270/month which is just over $15,000.



                Add in the extra two paychecks ($1950*2=$3900) and you're just short of $20,000.



                That's good. However, there are closing costs, realtor costs (if you use a realtor), moving expenses, "make it livable" expenses, etc.



                You should probably save for two years after you ensure that you have a $2600*6 = $15,600 emergency fund.






                share|improve this answer




























                  0












                  0








                  0








                  • 20% of $250K is $50K.


                  • 1/12 of $50K is $4,167.


                  • Your monthly take-home is about $3,900.



                  Basic math says that there's no way you're going to make the 20% down payment that we recommend.



                  Even 5% of $250K is $12,500.



                  If you're expenses are really $2,630/month, then you're saving $1,270/month which is just over $15,000.



                  Add in the extra two paychecks ($1950*2=$3900) and you're just short of $20,000.



                  That's good. However, there are closing costs, realtor costs (if you use a realtor), moving expenses, "make it livable" expenses, etc.



                  You should probably save for two years after you ensure that you have a $2600*6 = $15,600 emergency fund.






                  share|improve this answer
















                  • 20% of $250K is $50K.


                  • 1/12 of $50K is $4,167.


                  • Your monthly take-home is about $3,900.



                  Basic math says that there's no way you're going to make the 20% down payment that we recommend.



                  Even 5% of $250K is $12,500.



                  If you're expenses are really $2,630/month, then you're saving $1,270/month which is just over $15,000.



                  Add in the extra two paychecks ($1950*2=$3900) and you're just short of $20,000.



                  That's good. However, there are closing costs, realtor costs (if you use a realtor), moving expenses, "make it livable" expenses, etc.



                  You should probably save for two years after you ensure that you have a $2600*6 = $15,600 emergency fund.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited 1 min ago

























                  answered 1 hour ago









                  RonJohnRonJohn

                  12.5k42254




                  12.5k42254






























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