Buying a house is considered as one of the top
priorities for any individual. At the same time, buying a house is the
most time consuming and high energy demanding task of our lives.
‘I bought a house for ‘x’ amount 5 years back. My
friend who invested same amount in other sources has earned double than me’,
many ask me such questions. What goes wrong while buying a house? Thought to
share a write-up on three important factors you must consider while buying a
house.
1.
Where exactly you want to own a house?
Location is the primary factor to consider before
buying a house. Where exactly do you want to live? In an urban society or a
rural area? Look at the factors where you can compromise. For example, assume
your children are studying in a reputed school which is near to your new home
but your work place is quite far. Look for opportunities to move your job
near your new home. Or are you ready to travel a bit far for your work? List
down similar factors and choose the best combination before buying a house.
Remember, Safety is very important. Check whether you
have public utilities like hospitals, police station or fire station nearby, so
that you are safe during any emergency.
2.
Do you know the total price of the house you want to
buy?
Money decides everything in our day to day life. The
second most important thing is the money you want to allocate for investing in
your new home. Check the purchasing price. You must analyse the impact it will
create on savings that you have as of now and other expenses you do every
month.
Your job or earning power is very important to be
considered while budgeting. Do you have a permanent job or steady income? If
not, analyse how purchasing a particular home will affect your expenses if you
do not earn steadily for a particular period. Normally, we assume that the
price of the property is the total price. If you are buying a loan, adding the
down payment, interest and the total price of the house will give you the total
price. You can calculate the monthly payment as well from the total price.
Check the total price of the house whether it will
have net worth in the long time. If you want to sell your house at any point in
the future, you must know the approximate price you will get. To forecast it,
check the purchasing price and the current value in the neighbouring
properties. If the difference is good enough, you may very well know that your
house will also fetch you good return in the long run. However, you must
understand that the builder reputation, size of the house may raise some
concern though in the future.
3.
What type of home you want to own?
Have you been dreaming to own a house like Tamil poet
Bharathiar? A house with pretty pillars, a pond, 10 or 12 coconut trees, moon
light shining like a pearl, soft song of nightingales with a cool breeze to
make you happy. A separate house with your own garden and privacy will sure
make you happy. At the same time, you must understand the responsibilities it
brings in. You are solely responsible for the maintenance and repair works. If
you are ready to take this responsibility, you are all set to go for a villa or
a separate house.
Apartments come with lesser responsibility compared to
villas. You will be sharing the common space with others apart from owning your
living space. Even though maintaining the overall property is taken care by the
home owner associations, you have to pay a share of overall building
maintenance. Most of the apartment complex associations will have control on
the changes you make to your house.
Some important questions to add in the checklist
before choosing your dream home.
a.
Is
the location appropriate for me and my family to commute to work, school,
public utilities?
b.
Can
I afford this property? Will I be able to maintain the same lifestyle after
paying for the house?
c.
Do
I need a villa?
d.
What
disadvantages do I have in owning a villa?
e.
Will
I be happy in this apartment?
f.
What
is the maintenance fee involved in my house?
g.
Can
I afford the monthly expenses after owning this house?
There are gated communities with villas, apartment
complexes built by the reputed builders nowadays. Check for the monthly
maintenance fee associated with living in such communities. At times, you end
up paying huge sum periodically to maintain the overall community and security.
Can you afford it?
Think multiple times before investing.
The author is Ramalingam K, CFP CM is
the Chief Financial Planner at holisticinvestment.in, a
leading Financial Planning and Wealth Management company
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