The "how many rooms in your home" got me thinking about this.
We still have one kid at home who will just be starting high school next year, but we are older parents and have already started discussing our future retirement so it's something to consider before too long.
Why do you think downsizing may be a good idea for you and why not?
For us, we will most likely not need the space we have now. It's hard to know for sure, though. If my daughter and son marry and have families I would expect that the family holidays in our home would not continue since they'd probably want to celebrate in their own homes, spend some holidays with the in-laws, etc., but I may still want the space for visits. And what if they don't marry and/or have children? I want to have the space for them for as long as they may want to utilize it.
My other hesitation is yard size. I do not want to be right smack up against the house next to me, and I definitely don't want to share a common wall with another home. I like the large lot size we have now, and I know that smaller homes are generally built on smaller lots.
What I would like to change would be the ability to shut off (or at least reduce) the need to heat/cool a large section of the house. The way our current home is constructed that would be impossible. We have two air-handlers but the house is too open to shut any of it off. Ideally, I'd like to have a couple bedrooms and bathrooms and maybe a playroom (maybe with built-in bunks for grandchildren) in a part of the home with not only its own air-handler, but with doors that can be shut so that we're not constantly heating/cooling that space.
Has anyone else been thinking about this?
We're definitely thinking about this. The only hold-up is that -- with supply chain problems and inflated house costs -- this is a bad time to buy /build a house. Reasons we will downsize:
- We live in 2400 square feet, which is -- as someone said above -- "stupid large". We only use about half the space we have. Honestly, even when the kids were all still at home, we didn't use all the space; my kids called the formal living room "the Christmas tree room".
- I want less to clean. So many things about my current house are too much work; for example, my kitchen cabinets are ornate and collect "grime" in bitty little pretties. This isn't so much about "less stuff" as it's about better arrangement; for example, my laundry and my master closet are literally the whole house apart.
- I want better storage -- it's not that I want to get rid of everything, but I don't have nearly enough closet space here. Maybe that's not exactly downsizing -- it's more like right-sizing.
- Related: I want a house with less maintenance. For example, I want a metal roof that'll outlive me, and I want to arrange the yard so it doesn't require so much edging (which is 10Xs as much effort as mowing).
- Money is a reason. A smaller house with a smaller heating /cooling bill just makes sense for us as we reach retirement. Yes, we've saved, and we have money, but we'd rather use it for traveling and our grandchildren. Smaller houses also come with smaller bills when it's time to replace the roof or the carpet.
- The area where we live was perfect when we moved here, but it's grown bigger /more crowded in the years we've been here. We own land in a quieter place.
- This isn't really related to downsizing, but I want to build a house that's elder-friendly. We're only in our mid-50s, but I was a caretaker to my grandmother as she reached 99 years old, and I saw the things that made her life easier /I saw the simple things that could have made her life easier. Oddly, it's not the things people talk about (narrow doorways and hallways, for example) that made her life difficult; the #1 thing that caused her trouble was transitions in flooring -- I saw the linoleum-to-carpet transition between the kitchen and the family room throw her to the ground more times than I care to recall.
- Also not really downsizing, but I intend to build a bedroom suite that would be suitable for a live-in caretaker someday. An adult-sized bedroom, bathroom, closet that would work for an adult child or grandchild (or a paid caretaker) if I ever need such help.