CHAPTER 1 Owning vs. Renting
The largest investment most people make is their home. That makes buying a home—whether it’s a single-family residence, duplex, or condominium—the single largest, most complex transaction a person will ever undertake. It involves new terms and concepts, financial acumen, and larger figures than normally dealt with. Owning your own home may be one of the defining qualities of the American Dream, the set of ideals that includes opportunity for prosperity and success, and an upward social mobility for the family and children, achieved through hard work. Homeownership has long been considered one of the strongest representations of that vision — 66% of Americans own their own home, and many more hope they will or wish they did. Something about homeownership plucks a strong chord with Americans. Financial security, permanency, status, or pride; whatever the reason for wanting to own your own home, there has never been a time in recent memory when the health of our credit reports has meant so much as when we decide to buy a home of our own. Lifestyle plays a big role in the decision to own versus rent. Home buying is most often driven by household formation, such as marriage and growing a family. Less than 40% of people under 35 years old own homes, 60% of people over 35 years old own homes, and more than 80% of people 65 years old or over own homes. Interestingly, for the millennial generation, the primary reason for buying a home? Owning a dog.
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