Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#31
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#32
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OP, Your goal should be to carry the LEAST amount of monthly expenses. Take a close look at property taxes. If you buy a home located in Wildwood, you will have to pay an additional city tax. Unincorporated parts of Sumter do not carry this additional cost. Insurance concerns you? Call and get a quote on each home you wish to purchase. Insurance companies look at the style of home (vinyl vrs block) location, type of roof, as well as age. Some styles of homes may have higher quotes and you can eliminate them. Look at the yard and how much monthly maintenance it will need. Include the bond expense if the home has one. By choosing a home with the least amount of monthly expenses, you should be able to SAVE money each month instead of worrying about how to pay for unnecessary added costs. Worried about repairs or upgrades? ALL homes, new or old will have this added cost. Again, compare the homes. Add these additional costs to the sales price and omit ALL that go over your $350,000 goal. IMO, both of these need to be thoroughly reviewed before purchasing a home. Monthly expenses as well as the cost of the home. I have no idea of your finances. Due to high interest rates that can be earned, some are now choosing to rent a home instead of plopping large amounts of cash into a home. You may want to review this option with your financial advisor. If an older home with no bond, maintenance free lawn, and low taxes is the one you fall in love with, you may want to consider this. Finance the needed upgrades. Instead of paying monthly expenses for a bond, higher taxes, and extensive lawn maintenance, pay a monthly cost for the loan of your upgrades. Movng forward, Yyour monthly cost will be the same as a new home but you are living in a home you WANT instead of a home you settled for. Just another thing to consider Last edited by Randall55; 05-21-2024 at 08:33 AM. |
#33
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#34
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I thought it was good info for the op.
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#35
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Everything you describe is true, but buying a home is much more than a list of pros and cons and deciding based on rationalizations. What's more important is the feeling you get when you stand in the yard and inside the house and you have a sense that this one is the one (within financial reason, of course)
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#36
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If you buy brand new its cheaper. |
#37
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OP has stated they don’t care how Far or Close amenities are, has a set budget, which is important.
So from a standpoint of owning three new houses and one preowned in TV, gave insight for us. New house gives you that one year fix everything except landscaping, which was a piece of mind since odd things needed to be fixed, and not out of our pocket. Yes there is a bond, but one doesn’t need to ever pay off. We didn’t, just sold the house with bond in place. The new homes had better insulation, wind mitigation, for lower insurance. Repairs were non existent, for the 10 years we owned them. The 6yo preowned was great, paying $50,000 more than a new build for same house. Yes it was at the time in the middle of TV, for those who need to have medical facilities, doctors, and shopping, golf. But we didn’t shop at brick stores, going offsite for grocery stores that we prefer, doctors were that once a year required visit, and still traveling to multitude of golf, as far as 1 hour away. Even though we had 9 courses within minutes of our house, it became too boring to play over and over. Much more enjoyable to go to any of the new courses. Ten years later, house was now 16yo preowned house was dated, in need of a roof. Insurance quadruple, replaced hot water heater, HVAC, 4 windows lost seals, faucets, toilet rings, new sprinklers, and controller. Replaced carpet, flooring, electrical outlets, and garage opener, painted interior and exterior. We sold the house with balance of bond, so new owners assumed the balance. So which houses in that 10 year period was more out of pocket was the preowned, and would have been much more if we have done the total makeover it needed. I don’t think anyone can tell someone what is best for them, but offering advice of what works for them. OP good luck in your search, we love the southern area, and have continued to move farther south with each home.
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Do not worry about things you can not change ![]() |
#38
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#39
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I would first and foremost download the list of 3,000+ clubs from districtgov dot org recreation department and figure out which clubs you would want to go to each and every week. Then do the same for the sports and other activities. If your two favorite activities are, say, beach volleyball and bowling, and there are only 4 rec centers with beach courts and 3 bowling alleys, draw your search in Zillow around those 7 areas. Then consider if you want to be close to a grocery store, and how close you want to be to a "town square" with the entertainment and restaurants. Then consider type of house. For me it would have to be a courtyard villa or one with mature plantings that create a very private space. For that budget I personally would look at the area between Spanish Springs and Lake Sumter Landing. If possible one with vaulted ceilings and a courtyard in a nice looking neighborhood.
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#40
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#41
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You can find designer homes north of 466 for $350,000, with no bond, upgrades done and only county taxes to pay. I live and love north of 466, plenty of shopping and services, new young neighbors moving in every month, it's settled, quiet and beautiful up here.
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#42
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#43
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#44
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We rented for a month and if we had a do over would have rented longer |
#45
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My understanding of insurance costs and the age of home is not just the age of the roofing but the construction method used. I was informed that in 2001 Florida had a new building code requiring rafter straps to help keep the roof intact in high winds. I don't know if that went into effect immediately or maybe in 2002 once it had been approved and published to builders. Most homes north of 466 pre-date that code but not all. South of 466 I think they start around 2004-5 and have the strapping. There are a lot of homes built after 2001 north of 466. When I checked I estimated the older non-strap homes to add maybe $800-$1000 to the annual insurance cost and some companies won't even cover the older homes built without straps. I know I read about someone that retrofitted their home at some point with the straps but the insurance didn't seem to care. Everyone has a choice on location, taste, budget, etc. so there is no right or wrong place to live.
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