|
There is no doubt
that one of the more pleasant and exciting times for most people is when they
have decided to buy a home. This excitement exists whether or not you are
buying for the first time or the fourteenth time.
There is no doubt that the experienced home buyer has a relatively good idea as
to what it costs to buy a home today. However if it has been a long time since
you last bought a home, you may have forgotten or not be aware of the
associated costs involved
A lot of people think of the basic costs as legal fees, property tax
adjustments, GST in some cases, the cost of movers, the set-up fees for
utilities, new window coverings, etc. First timers should also consider home
maintenance costs, like tools, a lawn mower, etc. Beyond the basic costs, are
major cost factors like replacing flooring and roofs, or making additions.
These costs may be necessary to give you everything you want from your new
home.
On the opposite side, some buyers may gain a cost benefit from buying a new
home. You could buy in a development that has a fitness centre, or a swimming
pool. This means no more fitness club dues or transportation worries. Some
developments offer more luxurious features like golf privileges or skiing benefits.
Just as the above features offer you a financial and non-financial benefit;
there are non-financial costs to look at when buying your house.
A feature you must consider seriously when buying a home is its location. Look
at location from many view points and perceptions. A suggested question would
be:
where am I going to live relative to ............?
The relative to "what" includes work (my work, my spouses work),
established leisure activities (golf membership, hiking trails, night school courses,
children's ballet or music classes), children school or daycare, proximity to
family, best friends or the old neighbourhood.
Now to create a more interesting but realistic scenario, take all of the above
factors and try to determine the likely disruptions to a perfect schedule.
How often do you or your spouse have to work late or work unusual hours? Does
this mean that the public transit you plan to take at commuter time, is only
viable 50% of the time? Does this mean that little Mary or John may have to
miss a lot of soccer practices, or other activities that they enjoy?
Is the commuting experience likely to leave you too tired (physically or
emotionally), when you get home?
How important is the ease of transportation for you, to be able to leave work
to pick-up your sick child at school or at daycare?
If grandma or grandpa is in weak health; is being close by a true comfort?
Will you need to make new friends because you will only see our old ones at
holiday occasions?
In summary; when buying a home, consider the value of your purchase in relation
to the emotional costs imbedded in that purchase. Does a house 25 miles away
from where you spend most of your waking hours (at work and with friends) have
a non-financial cost? Is being anywhere from 45 to 75 minutes away (depending
upon traffic volumes) from a valued and trusted daycare for your child a
reasonable cost for you to deal with?
When you buy a home you want to be happy and satisfied on all counts, of which
money is only one.
|