Dear Penny: Should I Use My Savings to Buy a Retirement Home?

4 years ago 115

Dear M., You can clearly afford to buy a home. Normally Id start the finger-wagging if you told me you wanted to spend most of your savings for a home purchase. If you were still working, Id ask you...

Dear M.,

You can clearly afford to buy a home.

Normally Id start the finger-wagging if you told me you wanted to spend most of your savings for a home purchase.

If you were still working, Id ask you what would happen if you lost your job. And if you were a retiree who depended mostly on investment income, Id warn you that a stock market crash could temporarily wipe out much of your nest egg.

But you have no debt and $5,000 of monthly after-tax income thats guaranteed for life. Your income isnt contingent on a salary or the stock markets performance. So you can afford to spend a lot of your savings to buy a home.

Plus interest rates are historically low. Thats good for homebuyers, but not so good if you have $80,000 sitting in a savings account, where its probably earning 1% at best. It makes sense to put some of that money into an asset that history tells us will probably appreciate over time.

But I think you know you can afford to purchase a home even if you pay a slightly inflated price.

So think about why you want to buy a home: Is this an investment to you? Or do you want to buy a place to make your own for many long and happy retirement years?

Im not saying you have to choose one or the other. In fact, I wouldnt suggest buying a home unless you think it will be both a good investment and a good place to live.

But defining your goals will help you make the right decision. If youre buying a home as an investment, youd want to consider how you could maximize your ROI. In that case, of course, you wouldnt want to buy at the top of the market.

But if youre buying a home to live in thats well within your budget, its OK to buy even though the market seems sky high. Sure, it would still be nice to score a bargain price, but its less important when your home purchase isnt primarily an investment.

Which brings me to the second question you need to ask yourself: Whats the worst thing that could happen here?

If its purely an investment decision, the doomsday scenario is that you buy a house, the market crashes and youre left stuck with a house you cant sell.

Mind you, the housing market has remained strong even in the year of coronavirus. Its highly unlikely that well have a repeat of the 2008 housing crash. But were talking about the worst possible outcome here, so please bear with me.

If you approach this as buying a place to live? Suppose the market crashes and your home loses value. By buying at the markets peak, maybe youd miss out on the chance to buy more house for less. (Of course, theres the flip chance that the market keeps soaring and that this years prices will look like a bargain a year or two from now.)

Regardless, youll be paying $1,300 a month for housing whether you rent or buy. You might as well use that to build equity and since it sounds like youll make a substantial down payment, it doesnt sound like youd need to worry about being underwater, even if home values fell.

I think the biggest challenge youll face is sticking with your $1,300 a month budget. If thats the amount youre comfortable with, stand firm, even if that means buying an even smaller home than youd planned to.

The beauty of your situation is that you can afford to not make this a numbers game. If a home will help you enjoy your hard-earned retirement even more, let the house hunting begin.

Robin Hartill is a certified financial planner and a senior editor at The Penny Hoarder. Send your tricky money questions to AskPenny@thepennyhoarder.com.

This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, which helps millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. The Inc. 5000 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the fastest-growing private media company in the U.S. in 2017.


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