http://guxx.livejournal.com/ (
guxx.livejournal.com) wrote in
davis_square2006-04-12 09:34 am
Entry tags:
Question to those who rent
The popular theory is apartment rent should not be higher than 1/3 of net income.
To those of you who rent, does this hold true?
To those of you who rent, does this hold true?

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However, that was my choice so I could live alone, because roommates drive me nuts, and I drive them nuts. Figured it was better than therapy or legal fees when I tried to brain them.
The formula I heard when younger (from Mom, who probably got it from a very different generation) was for each month: 1/4 rent, 1/4 car (and presumably utilities), 1/4 food/entertainment, 1/4 savings.
Ha ha. "Savings." That's funny.
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My parents still live up north, where they are themselves landlords. Sometimes, over the phone, my mom'll forget where I am and ask me if I can believe that some apartments around her are going for $700/month, and they're still finding tenants, wow.
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Then we thought about buying a house last year, and they asked us what we were looking at, and I said we thought single-family houses were just too expensive so you might as well get a two-family and offset the mortgage with the rent, and the cheapest you could possibly do that for was half a million.
You could hear my parents' jaws hitting the floor and breaking on the other side. Oddly, my mom has never once since then mentioned how expensive housing is in my hometown.
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However, rent is just a part of it; if you factor in utilities, I'm paying about half my income on rent.
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Reference after a fashion here: http://www.hud.gov/offices/cpd/affordablehousing/index.cfm
There are other references on the HUD website to programs that will help families with housing costs that are higher than 30% of their income (with a gross household income below various thresholds). I've paper references, as well, but that's going to have to wait until after work.
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HUG glossary:
http://www.hud.gov/offices/cpd/library/glossary/a/index.cfm
Affordable Housing
Housing for which the occupant is paying no more than 30 percent of his or her income for gross housing costs, including utilities.
Income is a pointer to Annual Income
Annual Income
The HOME Program allows the use of three income definitions for the purpose of determining applicant eligibility:
1. annual income as defined in 24 CFR 5.609; or
2. annual income as reported under the Census Long Form for the most recent decennial census; or
3. adjusted gross income as defined for purposes of reporting under Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Form 1040 series for individual Federal annual income tax purposes.
(1 & 2 are gross income)
Adjusted Income
"Adjusted income" is "annual (gross) income" reduced by deductions (or allowances) for dependents, elderly households, medical expenses, disability assistance expenses, and child care. (The HOME Program allows the use of three definitions of "annual income.") Adjusted income is used only under the certain circumstances described in the "Calculating Income Eligibility" module.
All three income models, even adjusted, is pre-tax.
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I think I've been under or around the 1/3 net for quite some time. I'm a fair bit under 1/4 at the moment, but we just bought a place so that'll be changing soon :/
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I am moving next month (from Powderhouse to Teele) and my new rent will be closer to 1/3 of net.
(Right now I have three roommates, the new place will only have two roommates).
not including utilities...
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