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Updated about 7 years ago on . Most recent reply

What would you do?Purchasing power issues!
Greetings All
My wife and I are planning to sale our home in the next 6 months. Primarily to get our children in a better school district. Our price range for the area we are anticipating moving to is between $200-$260K. You can get a pretty decent size home for that amount in our market and with 3 small children we need it! However, I'm starting to wonder if I should even tie that much money up in a home. It will drastically reduce my purchasing power. We want to start RE investing and we could easily qualify for $160K with our current mortgage. So there are a couple of options I'm thinking about and would like to get your feed back. Here are the options:
1. Lease a property in the better school district and use all of my purchasing power to buy and flip properties. This would allow for me to invest $200-$260K.
2. Reduce our price range to $150k-$175K for our new primary home in the better school district . Thus allowing me to free up between $50K-$85K in purchasing power.
3. Lease option our first home. Lease a property in the better school district and use all of our purchasing power to RE invest.
What would you do?
Most Popular Reply

1 (lining someone else's pockets) and 3 (non-refundable deposit, higher than average rents on a house you may or may not purchase) waste money and you don't own anything.
Option 2 gets you want you want for your kids and doesn't tie up your money.