You can get a mortgage with a pretty cheap interest rate these days and you can deduct the interest from your income taxes, at least I think you still can. I am not certain about that though, the new tax laws may have changed it.
did u finish the inside with that or just the shellAs stated, home equity is an option. When I did mine in 2015, I ended up doing 2 different personal loans. One secured (24k) one unsecured (16k). Have one already payed off, and about half of the other. Admirals bank is who I used, they were great to deal with.
I have just been putting all my extra money towards paying off the loans, and in another six months I should be done
Don't wait till you are to old to enjoy it.
Cash or do without, for home and shop.
Paying cash is not always your best option. A lot of people take out a mortgage on their home. You can get a mortgage with a pretty cheap interest rate these days and you can deduct the interest from your income taxes, at least I think you still can. I am not certain about that though, the new tax laws may have changed it.
In any case, if you have investments you need to get serious and do the math of the interest you get versus the interest you will pay. You can't just do the initial interest comparison, you need to do the interest comparison for the whole term of the loan and see how it works out. I have found most times it works out financially better if I borrow the money and make payments.
did u finish the inside with that or just the shell
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When it comes to historical low interest rates, it’s often NOT better to pay cash. You should be killing that with good investments. Consult your financial advisor for details.
When it comes to historical low interest rates, it’s often NOT better to pay cash. You should be killing that with good investments. Consult your financial advisor for details.
This is a perfectly reasonable approach if you have the funds to cover a large purchase up front, and want to finance it to keep your funds invested and earning more. That's not a common scenario though, when nearly 60% of American adults would struggle to pay a surprise $500 expense.
The fact is, the majority of people that finance large purchases do it because they see it as the only way they'll be able to have the expensive thing that they want. For those people, it's not a good financial decision, it's just risky and expensive instant gratification.
Hopefully OP is in the first category and not the second, because going into debt for a luxury item that wouldn't otherwise be affordable is the kind of decision that keeps poor people poor.

I agree, but that isn't what we are talking about. We are talking about people paying cash for stuff rather than getting a loan and making monthly payments. Sometimes paying cash is the best financial decision, many times it isn't.This is a perfectly reasonable approach if you have the funds to cover a large purchase up front, and want to finance it to keep your funds invested and earning more. That's not a common scenario though, when nearly 60% of American adults would struggle to pay a surprise $500 expense.
The fact is, the majority of people that finance large purchases do it because they see it as the only way they'll be able to have the expensive thing that they want. For those people, it's not a good financial decision, it's just risky and expensive instant gratification.
Hopefully OP is in the first category and not the second, because going into debt for a luxury item that wouldn't otherwise be affordable is the kind of decision that keeps poor people poor.
I agree, but that isn't what we are talking about. We are talking about people paying cash for stuff rather than getting a loan and making monthly payments. Sometimes paying cash is the best financial decision, many times it isn't.
I was thinking about making one a primary residence. Do any one you currently live in one as a home
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I have 3 acres thats paid for as well as water and electric already there. It use to be a mobile home on the propertyI think most financial institutions, atleast around here in a rural area, will only finance something like for either 7 or 10 years.
Do you have land ? If so, is it developed ? Do you need a well, septic or other utilities ?
Do you have any type of plan ? Doing this in steps, buy land/pay off. Get utilities in order and in place. Get loan for structure and have it put up. Then finish inside yourself, paying as you go.
I have 3 acres thats paid for as well as water and electric already there. It use to be a mobile home on the property
I was thinking about making one a primary residence. Do any one you currently live in one as a home
