Wednesday, May 25, 2022

As Landlords (Temporarily) Rejoice, Renting Still Has Its Merits

 


“Every cloud has a silver lining” & “The grass is always greener on the other side”

(Popular Axioms)

 

I’m not sure I’ve ever read an article that talked about the “joys of renting.”  I’m sure it exists somewhere.  Maybe it’s because I’m saturated with a bunch of real estate industry communications that always tout “the dream of homeownership” and how everyone should strive for it. I’m bombarded by banter like, “There’s no feeling like stepping over the front door threshold for the first time and knowing that you own the home”*.

 

* As my uncle likes to point out, it must be the warm feeling that comes from knowing that your bank actually owns most of it.

 

The way home prices and rents have shot up, the pro-homeownership articles seem to have a lot of merit!  After sorting through all the mail and texts from investment groups hungry to buy homes, it is sometimes shocking to see what prices they are offering.  It makes me think, “I don’t think I have much money, but these people are telling me I’m sort of rich…”

 

But as a veteran of leaner landlord times when rent barely covered the mortgage (and often went negative when repairs and vacancy happened) and it was hard to sell a house, life wasn’t always so rosy.  I often thought of how renters had it pretty good in many respects:

 

  1. No fear of a $10K repair call at any moment
  2. If something major breaks, call the landlord and let him deal with it
  3. If you want to live somewhere else at any time, just move.  No fuss, no muss.

 

That all holds true today.

 

So, though it seems landlords have a better situation now, things change.  Renting will always have merit and hot markets always turn sour at some point.

 

Homeowners and landlords are able to enjoy current market conditions (and they should!), but renters shouldn’t feel totally left out.  Things always swing back and forth and renters always have some built-in advantages in any market that owners never get to enjoy. 

 

But, for now, landlords should rejoice!

 

(Very) Happy Landlording!

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