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> owning a house may make it harder for you to decide to move and accept a job/opportunity elsewhere, or to travel -- the impact of which is unquantifiable

Why is it harder? Not sarcastic at all, by the way : it's just that I am in Hong Kong and it's actually quite common for expats here to buy a house, give it out for rent, and never come back to Hong Kong again! In fact, I know of some cases where people have bought flats without even looking at them! (In both cases, someone they know manages rent collection + maintenance, presumably for a small fees?). So I was wondering what is different about the US / wherever you are right now.

Yes, it's a very personal decision, those were the exact words I was looking for! I suppose hardcore economists would say that the Utility Function is very personal.



If you decide to move, you have to do something with the house. I'm not sure about Hong Kong, but in the US, even once you own the house free-and-clear, a house is still a major expense -- insurance, property taxes, etc.

You can sell it or rent it to cover those costs, but both of those options take time and effort. To sell it, you need to market it, negotiate with a buyer, etc. To rent it, you need to market it, pick a good tenant, collect rent, do maintenance and repairs, probably deal with legal matters like eviction, etc.

I guess you could just give it away (but doesn't that still involve a bunch of title transfer fees?) or just stop paying taxes and let it get repossessed (but doesn't that destroy your credit?).

If you rent, you can just pack up and leave -- the only limits are any terms stated in the lease.

All of that said, I'm doing exactly what you mentioned -- I bought a house instead of renting, even though I don't plan to stay here very long (I'm actually thinking of moving again in a few months, once I've been here for a year). But I did it with the explicit intention of renting the house to make a profit once I move -- and I plan to do that with my next place, as well.


I currently pay $55/month for someone to worry about collecting rent, finding someone to rent, negotiating, checking credit, etc. for my rental property. It is not very profitable in terms of cash flow, but I am building equity into the house.


Yep, finding a property manager is one great solution to the problem. Did you find a good one easily? I've heard it's really hard to find a good one that actually manages the property well and keeps it rented out consistently. I haven't really looked myself, though, so all I really know about it is from stories on BiggerPockets.


I went with the agent who sold me the house in the first place, and found me a rental before then. I don't know how much of it was luck and how much was by design but the rental is in a location where rent is higher than mortgage payments by quite a margin and I found a good company to manage it.


I don't think it's harder, my house is in Florida but I live in the Bay Area now. As long as you have someone that can collect the rent etc.. for you it's not a big deal if you did not stretch yourself too thin with the purchase.




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