The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

The ‘good enough’ home may be just perfect

- By BarbaraMar­quand NerdWallet This article was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet. Barbara Marquand is a writer at NerdWallet. Email: bmarquand@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @barbaramar­quand .

Constructe­d from aspiration­al Instagram feeds and reality TV, the dream home floats in the imaginatio­n like a castle in the sky but dissolves in the rain of hard numbers.

Chasing the dream can lure buyers to overextend themselves financiall­y. Or the high prices can lead first-time homebuyers to delay a home purchase — and the opportunit­y to start building home equity.

For many homebuyers, buying a “good enough” home can be a sounder strategy, particular­ly for those most eager to become homeowners.

“I’d rather see people buy a good enough home versus buying a dream home and being cash-strapped over the next 20 years,” says Alyssa Lum, certified financial planner and founder of Luminate Financial Planning in Herndon, Virginia.

Here’s the beauty of a good enough home.

It has the essentials

A good enough home may not have artisan tile or stainless steel appliances, but it has the essentials.

Look for a home that’s well-maintained, has “good bones” and is in a good location, says Kelly Roth, a real estate agent with Pearson Smith Realty in Ashburn, Virginia. A well-maintained home in a good location will likely increase in value and probably won’t be a money pit.

Buyers tend to home in on cosmetic upgrades, Roth says, but she advises focusing on basics, like windows, the roof, and the heating and air conditioni­ng system. Then you’re less likely to face surprise repairs just to make the house functional.

If you can’t have it all — and most people can’t — list the features you want, and decide where you’re willing to compromise.

AmberMille­r, a certified financial planner with The Planning Center in the Minneapoli­s-St. Paul area, bought her first home two years ago. It has features she wanted, such as hardwood floors and a separate dining area, but isn’t flawless.

One of the bathrooms has outdated salmon-pink tile. “I thought, well, it’s not beautiful but it’s clean and functional,” she says. “This isn’t going to be the house I’m in forever, but it’s good enough for now, and I love it.”

It fits your lifestyle

Roth tells of a couple who fell in love with a home that looked like a dream. But the commute to work — 90 minutes each way — became a nightmare.

“They bought it in August and sold it in March,” Roth says.

“Good” is personal. A big yard could be amust for a family with a dog, but a pain if you hate yardwork.

And a good home matches your timeline. It shouldmeet your needs for the years you plan to live there, which probably isn’t forever if it’s a first home, Roth says.

It doesn’t squeeze your budget

Agood enoughhome has a reasonable price for your budget. Lumrecomme­nds keeping your debt-to-income ratio under 30%. That’s the percentage of grossmonth­ly income that goes toward debt payments, including themortgag­e.

Lenders will qualify buyers with considerab­ly higher ratios. But thatmay not leave much for other expenses, says Trey Reed, a loan officer withMVBMor­tgage nearWashin­gton, D.C.

“Maxing out (debt-to-income) is something I see people do, but not something I recommend,” Reed says.

A good enough home leaves youwith enough money for other priorities, such as saving for retirement and emergencie­s, and for all the costs of ownership besides the mortgage. That includes home insurance, property taxes, utilities andmainten­ance.

Fifty-five percent of homeowners — 68% of those ages 21 to 34 — had regrets about their preparatio­n for the home-buying process, according to Bank of theWest’s 2018 Millennial Study. The top regret for all age groups: costly maintenanc­e.

Miller says to budget about 1% to 3% of the home’s value annually for maintenanc­e.

It can be transforme­d

Over time, you can add dreamy features. When shopping for a home this year in Leesburg, Virginia, Jenny andMike Virbickis found a beautifull­y upgraded house priced $75,000 more than they planned to spend. They kept looking and found a home that fit their budget.

“I’d rather have a house my family can grow into and we can fix up to make it our own rather than something we can’t afford,” Jenny says.

Their home has space for their toddler to play, is structural­ly sound and is in the neighborho­od they wanted. Eventually, they’ll make home improvemen­ts. But for now, it’s perfect. After a block party in their cul-de-sac recently, Jenny says, “I came home and said, ‘This is where we were meant to be.’”

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