The First-Time Homebuyer Blues



It's as I'm packing up the last boxes from my first home that it really hits me how few things went right with this, the biggest purchase of my life.

I tried. I tried really hard to make the "smart" money decisions, but it seems none of that mattered in the end.

In the mid-2000s, everyone was urging me to buy property, and with the insane loan options they had then I probably could have gotten something nice. But, fresh from a college economics class, I said: No way, prices aren't matching with incomes. The bubble will certainly burst.

Burst it did in 2006. By 2008, the year my husband and I were married, we thought we were getting in at the bottom of the real estate dip on a small 2-bed, 1-bath home in a rough-but-up-and-coming neighborhood. The house was small, but it was also considerably cheaper than the maximum loan the bank would give us — another way we thought we were being "smart" with money.

We found a special first-time homebuyer's program through the Portland Development Commission and jumped through their many bureaucratic hoops. Except, during closing, they suddenly revealed that since my husband had been picking up some overtime in the months leading up to our move, we no longer qualified for their special rate. Instead we would have to take the 5 percent APR of the Oregon Bond Loan, which at that time it was no different than the market rate.

Over the years, we invested in a few home improvement projects as able — renovating the shower and its moldy window, adding a small dishwasher, repainting absolutely everything.

We even heard about a promising new Clean Energy Works program spearheaded by Mayor Sam Adams. The idea was a good one. Say your gas bill is $100 a month. This program set up a loan with $50 a month payments that you use to install insulation that lowers your gas bill to $50 per month. So, you still pay $100 a month, but you use less energy.

That part of the program did, technically, work. Everything else about it was horrid. The recommended contractors were awful; the work had to be redone several times. Sitting down to sign the loan paperwork was also the first time we learned that the loan structure was such that large amounts of interest were paid first and then after six years would be a balloon payment of several thousand dollars. Not awesome.

Fast-forward to today. Our modest first-time home is worth $50,000 less than we paid for it; $30,000 less than we owe on it. This doesn't include any of the money we spent on upgrades.

Because we have an Oregon Bond Loan, we are not with Fannie or Freddie and so don't qualify for any of the national loan restructuring programs aimed at people like us. Because of unforeseen circumstances — namely, a pregnancy resulting in two children, one with a significant disability — we also have dramatically less income and less savings than anyone assumed we would at this point. If we did, we might be able to invest in a refinance at today's current 2.5 percent rates that would almost halve our monthly mortgage payment.

As it is, every month we pay the bank as part of our mutual fantasy in which the house is adequate collateral for our loan. For some reason they refuse to consider the possibility of continuing this fantasy in a refinance that would make it easier for us to not foreclose on the house.

But we're "smart" about money, remember? We haven't missed a payment; our credit is perfect. Doesn't matter.

Oh well. Even if we could refinance, the home is too small for a family of four, especially when one of them comes with a lot of equipment.

This confluence of circumstances means we are moving. Into a larger home, yes, but one that our family of four shares with four other adults. We are doing like many Americans in this lackluster economy and moving into a multi-generational household in yet another attempt to make a "smart" money decision.

Depending on your politics, you may read this account and think anything from: "See? This is why we shouldn't have any government programs," to: "See? This is why we need better government programs."

One thing I know for certain is that my "smart" money decisions look pretty dumb in hindsight.

Comments

  1. as you know, we also found ourselves in a living situation with parents. looking back now, it was a wonderful time and the bond the kids have w/ their nana & papa is strong & so heart warming. i like to think the bond they share is partially due to our co-habitating. hang in there, long-distance-friend. i'm thinking of you all.

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  2. We also made the tough decision to walk away from our underwater house shortly after our daughter's diagnosis, when we were spending money like water and had to choose: therapy or mortgage payment. It was hard to do, and boy do I wish we had done some things differently (not buy the house in the first place, for one), but one year later, our lives are richer in money and time not spent on house projects. We can focus on each other and the future, instead of spending our energy worrying about how to make the house payment. I forgot how great it is to be a renter! Best wishes for the road ahead.

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  4. It is funny the way life goes. Back in the early 1980s I couldn't wait to get out from under my parents' roof ... live my own life ... be free. Thirty years and a half-dozen houses later -- all blessedly (but one barely) free from the burst housing bubble's financially devastating grasp -- I would join my parents in a communal living situation in a hot second were it possible. There will be a silver lining to this story, Shasta ... I'm sure of it. And I think it will come in the form of relationships between the three generations that may be tried in time but can stay true and rich for a lifetime. Best to you, Matt and the kids!

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  5. I can relate to what your saying Shasta. It's getting harder and harder for people even here in Canada! When I went on permanent disability things got a lot harder for my wife and I with our mortgage. When our rate came up for renewal they wouldn't let us lock in at the new lower rate. Hang in there it will all work out!

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  6. We are in the middle of buying our first home (and I have identical twin girls two-year-olds). Plus, we both write books. Hope to see you at the SCBWI conference this weekend!

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    1. That's so cool! Hope to see you there too and we can swap stories about sleepless nights. ;)

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