shopoholic
Member
This may seem stupid, I know a lot either use a HELOC or cash, but for those of you that financed who did you go through?
Looking at doing a 40'x60'x12' pole barn.
Looking at doing a 40'x60'x12' pole barn.
Building a house and a shop are very different things. What about septic/sewer? Separation between the living space and shop space?We have equity but not enough for 50k yet, closer to half that, plus just refinanced last year at 2.625% from 4%. Rates are around 5% right now so yeah almost double
Current home is sitting on a little over 2 acres, we bought the empty lot next to ours.
What's the thoughts on maybe adding a small bedroom area on one end, adding heating and cooling and then financing like a mortgage? Is that a grey area? Or for that fact just a bed in it ha
Yes, that is what a heloc does.I have been researching as well and finally got tired of conflicting information so I posted here.
Just got off the phone with a bank that someone I know used for his... not sure if he did HELOC or not but the bank said they could do up to 50k for 84mo at 7-10% for a building but she would not elaborate much without getting an invoice from a contractor/company.
If I knew for sure we were at the peak of housing I would pay the $325 appraisal to see where we stand. But being in a LCOL area I doubt its even 10k more. Went back and looked, the last appraisal was 9/14/20 little more than the year I initially said, may be worth trying.
With HELOC we would not refinance just borrow against the house right?
If you are relying on the market peaking to afford this, you may want to think twice
Adding a shop add little value. Certainly nowhere near what the project costs. Either way, we aren't talking about just spending cash. This is a loan, secured by a property's value at a market peak. They are very different things.IMHO, it's a no-brainer. Can't go wrong making your property worth more with real improvements funded by equity - like another legal building. Spending it on new lawn, fence, paint, and flowers isn't the same.
Here, heloc rates are usually an interest point above prime. Appraisals are usually ~10% better than annual property tax value assessments. Both ratchet upwards when a couple houses on your street sell high.
True that. I wouldn't want to lose the house because I couldn't pay for the shop when times get hardAdding a shop add little value. Certainly nowhere near what the project costs. Either way, we aren't talking about just spending cash. This is a loan, secured by a property's value at a market peak. They are very different things.
But it is not my money being spent here.
This is always said, but not definitely not my experience. My AHJ may as well have laid the declared permit value right onto the assessment.Adding a shop add little value. Certainly nowhere near what the project costs.
Or be way underwater if you need to moveTrue that. I wouldn't want to lose the house because I couldn't pay for the shop when times get hard
It's easy to say the money will do better in the market but will you really put it there? The market can certainly return better, but it can also lose value. Not taking on debt is a guaranteed return.Not relying on but trying to do this building efficiently. IF I could get a HELOC or financing for a lower interest rate 3-4% then why use cash. It would serve me better in the market at that point. But its quickly looking like the interest rates are just going to kill any ideas of thinking this way
Assessments generally have no tie to reality. An appraisal will be much more accurate and ultimately, none of it matters until you sellThis is always said, but not definitely not my experience. My AHJ may as well have laid the declared permit value right onto the assessment.
Not here. They keep going up, up, up - together.Assessments generally have no tie to reality. An appraisal will be much more accurate and ultimately, none of it matters until you sell
With the way rates are headed and stagnant wages, debt is going to get a lot more expensive.Yeah good point. I would HOPE it would do better in the market. Every time I get a raise I do half of that towards 401k before I see the check, so I probably am in the minority that can answer yes to that.
For debt I don't mind a home loan and one vehicle at a time.. everything else is generally high interest.. we credit card and travel hack as well but its not a revolving debt.. paid every statement.
I wouldn't be opposed to this shop being a debt because I rather not wait 3-5 years to pay cash. May end up being a combo of cash and HELOC and I have to wait a year or so instead of doing it now.
I went into the build with this mentality, but it was a strain and I gave it up. Moreover, bylaws didn't allow a home-based auto-repair business at all.I'd love a 40'x60' shop, but there's no way I'd consider financing such a project unless it was going to generate an income in some way.
Multiplying a percent by a percent is a silly way to make a small increase of a small number seem dramatically large.With the way rates are headed and stagnant wages, debt is going to get a lot more expensive.
I bought my house last summer at 2.8%. Same mortgage today would be 33% more.
I didn't multiple a percent by a percent. I calculated the new payment at the new rate and felt like giving a percentage would better state the change vs just saying it would go up $700.Multiplying a percent by a percent is a silly way to make a small increase of a small number seem dramatically large.
A 33% increase on a tiny 2.8% mortgage rate only brings it up to 3.72%, which is still a low rate by historical comparison.
Sounds dramatic, though.
The thing to realize is that if you decide to move and sell, that heloc will need to be paid off. If you don't have enough equity to cover it you could be in trouble.
But your money is out of the market during the payback and if you leave your employer, you typically have to pay it back.An alternative you may want to consider is a 401k loan. Note this is a loan from your 401k, not a distribution, and does not carry any taxes or penalties. The benefit is that it's typically a lower interest rate, the interest is paid back to yourself, and you aren't risking your property.
Sure wish I would have taken out a big 401k loan before this market dip!But your money is out of the market during the payback and if you leave your employer, you typically have to pay it back.
401k loans are not a great idea
$40k in excavation? What kind of work did you need?You need to take in account everything needed for the building. I just had a 40x60x14 built.
Building=$44,925
Excavation where it was built= budget$25k actual $39k
Gravel for concrete= $2,000
Concrete= Being done May 10th; 40x60 pad and 40x30 apron; 25k
Electrician to put up meter and panel box= $2,000
and I am not done yet.........................
A ton! A lot of trees removed and my pad took 115 loads of shale to get it to grade. You can check out my shop build. It is in progress now................$40k in excavation? What kind of work did you need?
I can relate. Yard looked fine to build on, but wasn't. It was a hastily filled-in ravene some 50 years ago. Old dirt had to be trucked out and replaced with compactable fill.$40k in excavation? What kind of work did you need?
I have learned "flat is NOT level"I can relate. Yard looked fine to build on, but wasn't. It was a hastily filled-in ravene some 50 years ago. Old dirt had to be trucked out and replaced with compactable fill.
I also skipped the electrical and interior to save money; so as to dismiss the contractor asap.
