cats mom
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2000
- Messages
- 5,337
I think one of the problems (besides property taxes. can't help those) is that people still think houses should double and triple in value in 1 year. Those returns were inflated and not sustainable. Houses are made for slow, steady rates of returns. So don't think of your house as "Worthless" or the value as "all gone". it is not.
ITA
I think the often-quoted nonsense that homes appreciate faster than inflation is just that... nonsense. Granted appreciation can definitely be higher in some locations, especially in the short-term; but average appreciation for the country as a whole, over the long-term, is very closely tied to the general rate of inflation (especially if you account for the fact that homes are getting larger). This has to be the case, because if homes always got more expensive faster than earnings went up, it wouldn't take long until nobody would be able to afford to buy a home (barring tax payer funded assistance programs, lax lending standards, and really stupid financing products of course).
When I run rent vs buy calculations I always run one scenario where I set the rate of appreciation and the inflation rate exactly the same, because long term I know that's a fairly safe bet.
I know it's easier said than done, but I wouldn't worry about paper losses if you can afford your home and you don't have to sell.
)

We have very affordable housing and no bubbles to worry about!