Serious question: how much house can a successful dentist afford once he is financially secure?
Serious question: how much house can a successful dentist afford once he is financially secure?
I think the better question is how much house *could* your afford? vs How much house *should* you get?
If one isn't careful and prudent with their finances, then they could very easily end up with bankruptcy issues all the while making an annual income that puts them ahead of the vast majority of the population.
I'll use myself as an example. My wife and I have our primary home and a vacation home. Neither are "small" or "mansion like" but they each have plenty of space and ammenities for our family. Our monthly COMBINED mortgage payments are less than 1/2 of what various lending agencies say we could afford. I'd much rather have the extra $$ to do with what I want to do rather than have more square footage above and beyond what is already plenty for us. Check your ego when considering investments is a solid strategy for sure
One thing I am afraid the most is the inability to practice dentistry due to an illness, old age, or death. I know I can't practice dentistry forever. The disability insurance is not enough to cover our living expenses. Therefore, I have to protect my family by investing in rental properties.BLS (average salary of $146,920) is biased towards corporate dentistry chains. However the ADA (average salary of $192,680) is biased towards private practice owners. The actual average salary of a dentist is somewhere in between those two values. So it depends on whether or not you would want your own practice or not and your demographics. To have a lot of house, you should move to a rural area and open your own practice. If you want a little bit of house, practice in California.
If you buy single family homes and 4 (or less)-unit apartments, your loan term will be just like any other residential loans...15, 20, 30 years fixed, whatever you prefer.out of curiosity, how long do you mortgage your rental properties for?
If you buy single family homes and 4 (or less)-unit apartments, your loan term will be just like any other residential loans...15, 20, 30 years fixed, whatever you prefer.
I also have a 5-unit apartment and this is considered a commercial property; therefore, I had to borrow a commercial loan, which is harder to obtain, higher interest rate, and required more down payment. My commercial loan term is 7 year fixed. After 7 years of payments, there will still be a large balance....I either have to refinance for another 7 year term or pay it off.
I chose 30 years because my cpa advised me not to pay off these debts too fast.i understand how it works, what i was asking is how long you choose to finance your non-commercial properties for.
One thing I am afraid the most is the inability to practice dentistry due to an illness, old age, or death. I know I can't practice dentistry forever. The disability insurance is not enough to cover our living expenses. Therefore, I have to protect my family by investing in rental properties.
When I buy houses, I want to make sure that I can easily sell them in the future. When I buy investment homes, I want to make sure that I can easily find the tenants to help pay for the mortgages. For this reason, I'd never buy houses in small rural areas where no one wants to live. All of my houses are in the heart of Orange County, CA. The smallest one is a tiny ugly 1100 sf house that has 3 bed 1 bath. I have no problem finding the tenants who are willing to pay $1800/month in rent for this house.
I chose 30 years because my cpa advised me not to pay off these debts too fast.
that's interesting, is it because of a mortgage interest deduction on the investment property? part of me would opt to put my IPs on 15yr notes just to build the equity that much faster and increase profit should i choose to unload them. then again, i'm no cpa...and i'll hire one just as you have to advise me.
My cpa advised me that I should pay off the mortgage on the primary home first. According to him, if I pay off the mortgage on the rental properties first, then I will have no deductions and this will result in a higher capital gain tax. My cpa also advised me to take out the home equity loan from my primary house to buy more investment properties but I decide not to take the additional risk because I don't want to work forever to pay down the debts.that's interesting, is it because of a mortgage interest deduction on the investment property?
part of me would opt to put my IPs on 15yr notes just to build the equity that much faster and increase profit should i choose to unload them. then again, i'm no cpa...and i'll hire one just as you have to advise me.