this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2025
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ahh ok. my fault - you rent rooms. I was speaking to the rental of houses. you could sell the suites however. individually. condos are a thing.
No, I rent houses. That basement suite is the lower suite, the upper suite is a separate unit. My point is that they are far too big an investment for renters to actually be able to buy and many of my renters dont WANT to buy. Some do and several have done so but thats the minority.
And condos are a very bad investment. Condo fees and insurance, plus emergency repairs on them make them highly expensive. Would never touch one.
who said a thing abt investment. this is housing
Well, no matter whether you intend it to be or not, every purchase of real estate is an investment.
how so?
Anything you put thousands of dollars of your own money into is an investment - collector cars, crypto, artwork, gold, your Star Wars collection, and housing. Whether those are a GOOD investment or not is another question, but its definitely an investment.
if I purchase a home because I need a place to live, it’s not an investment. Investment comes when sale is realized. On the point of the seller. I own my home. I will not sell it. It is not an investment. It is where I live.
Whether you sell it or not, that doesnt change the fact that you have invested a great deal of money into it, therefore it is an investment. Its status in your life has nothing to do with whether you plan on making a profit on it or not, its merely the definition of investing money.
It's an investment for you but it's an expense for your clients. It's an investment for you because if you sell it, you're not homeless. You can realize the return on investment. I'm a poor person who is fortunate enough to own my home. It doesn't make sense for me to think of my home as an investment because I can never realize the return.
If I need to buy a pacemaker or an artificial heart for however many hundreds of thousands of dollars, you would call that an investment. That's absurd.