Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The builder will also try and sell you a ton of 'upgrades' when you buy the house. If I left my wife to her own devices she would have easily added another 100 grand to the price of the home. Granite countertops, hardwood floors, extra cabinetry, etc. really add up. You can usually contract or do the work yourself for much cheaper... if you don't mind waiting to start until the house is complete.
I'd like to request a place that has really good living conditions.
I don't know if I'd rather put Yuma before Cherry Point or not. There are a bunch of pros and cons for each, both for family and flying reasons.
This is awesome advice that I'm going to have to sit on for a while. I noticed the second I bought my house, HGTV and the DIY Network immediately became more attractive! I have no idea how long we'll stay in our house, but I love upgrading but I'm going to hold off on your advice. I have to put the rest of the fence up, get guttering put on, bury some guttering runoff lines in the ground myself....and of course make the wife plant some flowers, but I guess I'll hold off after that. I don't think we plan on selling it if/when we leave, renting more likely. We think we bought at the perfect time and plan on letting our house increase in value vice sell after 3 years. Anyways, luckily it came with all the ammenities you mentioned earlier, so I'm hoping vice some paint the wife will be happy for a while.It really isn't worth throwing that much money into a home. We regret that we got even a single upgrade, and most we did ourselves after moving in. I doubt this is your dream destination where you will spend the next 40-50 years of your life, so why invest that much in making a house you may only live in for two years your dream home?
I just spent 5 hours doing yard work. Don't get me wrong, I love my house and would not trade our place here in Tennessee for any that we have lived at so far in the Navy (except Austin, but college does not count), but sometimes I wish that I had a condo.
Same here, of all the places I've lived, Austin is the top! I could do without the insane property taxes (compared to Florida) and massive electric bills but as far as quality of life goes you can't beat it here....BTW I think we're at day 33 or so of triple digit heat.
Power bill is through the roof... I keep the place at 75 (warmer than I'd like), have my water heater turned down and keep the curtains all closed up and I'm still paying in the high $200s a month for power.
I just spent 5 hours doing yard work. Don't get me wrong, I love my house and would not trade our place here in Tennessee for any that we have lived at so far in the Navy (except Austin, but college does not count), but sometimes I wish that I had a condo.
I can't wait to move to Jax and get an actual yard. I find yard work relaxing and love the smell of fresh cut grass. I am so sick of Padre Island rocks!
I hear you. I've lived in south Tejas about a year so far, and the heat is relentless... At least in Florida you had that sea breeze to mitigate things.
Power bill is through the roof... I keep the place at 75 (warmer than I'd like), have my water heater turned down and keep the curtains all closed up and I'm still paying in the high $200s a month for power. This place is only 900 or so square feet too.
Thought I was getting a good deal with this place with low rent... Turns out I'm paying out the a$$ on the back end because I have an outdated AC unit and poor insulation. Live and learn.
I live in Central Texas and the wife keeps our thermostat at 80. So far the largest electric bill this year was $235. The last month it's been over 100° every day but a handful, I'm really not looking forward to the next bill.Try keeping it at 79 and $600 plus, bigger place though, with two A/C units but the summer kills me...they just put us on "water hours" now as well..
I don't know...that St. Augustine grass is a pain to keep up...at least you can paint the rocks green.
Absolutely! We intentionally went with fewer "builder" upgrades for this specific reason. We did some pricing on our own after a couple of options seemed unusually high. Between the builder pushing them and the nitwit site agent for their realty trying to talk us into everything under the sun, we said "no thanks." We'll take the basic items on some stuff and upgrade later at our convenience and at a significantly lower cost. Site agent wants more commission, builder wants a bigger share for work he won't actually be doing himself... In the end it's all done by subcontractors who you could have do the work independently and save a ton of money (we've already used some of the builder's subs for things).