Is your husband being overly optimistic about the financial reality of the condo? Is it really SURE to appreciate in value, or stay even? Have you looked at real estate trends in the area?
Of course nothing's sure these days, but we haven't been hit as hard as other areas of the country. His argument is that if it AT LEAST holds it's value it's a good deal, and I really do think
we wouldn't lose money on the deal. I'm just not sure it'd be
worth the effort it'd take, nor am I sure that it's the best choice for her.
From a parent's perspective one of the great things about the dorm: maintenance department.
Yeah, that's one of my concerns . . . one of his gloss-overs.
If they were so cheap wouldn't people just hoping to make money and rent to students and tourists have already scooped up the good ones . . . What about transportation?
People DO buy these just as investments, not because they need to house their kids.
Transportation's covered by free student busses that run through the college and around town -- out to restaurants, shops,
Walmart, and the grocery store -- but I wouldn't choose a condo that wasn't walking distance to the college.
By the way, IMO "kiddie condo" is really a yucko term. Just say you're thinking of buying a condo for your adult daughter in college to live in...don't make people wonder if you're talking about a play structure for cats...
Kiddie . . . kitty . . . I'm not confused. I didn't coin the phrase. It's been around a while.
Really push that angle with your DH. If DD is in the dorm there will be campus security, lots of other students around and RA's. I got very sick once when I was living in the dorms.
I do think safety is the thing that's going to convince him -- at least for the freshman year.
She may want to join a sorority and live in the sorority house. Those were good times (no parties in the house!) It's impossible to predict what direction she will pick now - I'd wait until she's finishing up her freshman year!
Nah, she's not a sorority type of girl, and I don't see that changing.
We had considered doing this, as we have 3 boys that will overlap a bit in college years. We were talking to some friends who had done this, and don't recommend it. Their child had roommates, and thus, became the landlord. It didn't work out very well. They child had to be the one to kick people out, collect late rent, etc. They didn't end up with very responsible roommates and they sort of regretted the whole thing.
This is a very good point. I know people whom I like very much, but who aren't really financially responsible. I wouldn't really want to tangle my living expenses up with theirs.
BTW, don't forget the TVM (interest rate) calculations. Either you are going to have that money out of your investments and into real estate (where gains are expected to be flat for several years) or you'll have a mortgage. That's what's really killing us on the idea that we will "break even" - the interest charges. Real Estate has been volitile lately. You could do well. You could not do so well.
Yeah, I'm not at all interested in doing this to "break even" -- I don't think he would be either. IF I could know that he's right -- that the second child would pick this college, and that we could actually recoup the cost of two college students' housing x 4 years -- I'd be tempted. But that's assuming that EVERYTHING went our way: the second child chooses the same school, the furnace never breaks, etc., etc., etc. I don't want to go to the trouble to choose a condo, maintain a condo, sell a condo . . .
just to break even. No thanks.
In fact, most of the graduates of my high school who went to colleges transferred by the time they graduated.
Really? I knew very few people who transferred schools.
My parents did this. My sister is living in a condo in Richmond that they bought for her to live in. Housing was only guaranteed for freshman and she didn't win the lottery for a room after the first year so they had to do something.
My daughter could end up in this situation. The school guarantees freshman housing, but
they don't guarantee upper-classmen housing. However, I understand that this isn't usually a problem, and that students who file paperwork on time for the next year don't usually have a problem getting sophomore-junior-senior housing on campus. Anyway, I can't make a decision about what might happen with a lottery that might happen after her first year!
Well, after reading quite a few responses, I am inclined to stick with my original opinion: The savings aren't likely to be worth the effort /loss of opportunity on campus. My husband, being more optimistic than I am on the subject, will respond to the details about extra costs (which would whittle away at his perceived savings) and safety. Safety being the trump card.
Having started in community college and having only visited dorms on the weekend, he gives NO credence to the social aspect of living in a dorm, as I said earlier, being completely convinced that they are only one small step up from Hell.
I think if he pushes it, I'll schedule a weekend to go up and look at places . . . and then after we look, I'll insist that we go at midnight to walk from the library or the Student Union to the condos we've looked at. With any luck, it'll be cold, rainy, and -- most of all -- empty. He's a good daddy (if a cheapskate), and he will respond to that.