We don't really consider ourselves budget travellers any more — we tend to avoid hostels — but we've found that
renting nice apartments for a month or more can be just as affordable.
That's enough to
rent a nice apartment (or pay the mortgage on, say, a + / - $ 1m house), take a nice vacation each year, and probably pay private school tuition for one or two kids... but you're certainly not going to be flying your own Gulfstream with only $ 5 million.
If you want to get a good interest rate on a loan, or even be able to
rent a nice apartment, you have to have a good credit score.
Not exact matches
Second, millennials don't really want to buy yet — they prefer
renting apartments with
nice amenities, as do baby boomers who are downsizing, so I think at least the
apartment market could stay stable regardless of how the rest of the economy performs.
You might want to consider
renting a
nice large
apartment instead and see how that it feels.
We live in Germany, spending roughly 60k per year, including the
rent for a 1000 square feet
apartment in a good location (but in a rather small city, only 400k people), a
nice car and going on vacations for the full five weeks we have off work.
Nice Axiometrics chart posted by MFE Mag showing the top
apartment building investment markets for
rent growth and employment growth.
Employment growth is one of the key drivers of a good
apartment market but it can be overrun by Continue reading Nice chart of top Apartment Building Investment markets for rent and employmen
apartment market but it can be overrun by Continue reading
Nice chart of top
Apartment Building Investment markets for rent and employmen
Apartment Building Investment markets for
rent and employment growth.
It's a 4 bedroom / 2 bathroom house -
renting even a shitty 1 bedroom / bath
apartment in this area costs 1k, 2 bedrooms go for 1250, and anything remotely
nice would be the cost of my mortgage, PMI, and home owners insurance combined!!!!! Add to the factor that I can write - off ~ 26k in just my first year of interest / PMI and you will realize that
renting is SUCH a waste of money at least here in the state of NJ!!
The Champions were paying $ 1,400 in monthly
rent for a
nice two - bedroom
apartment.
Steady jobs, a
nice rented apartment in San Diego, world travel as often as possible, friends, family — oh, and some debt!
So, Sarah goes out and finds a
nicer and one bedroom
apartment, but pays twice the
rent.
I pay $ 1875 in
rent a month for a
nice apartment with a roommate in a good location.
I try to find a
nice apartment in Montreal - but so complicated and
rents at reasonable prices are all so dirty.
-- No penny stocks — No commodities, I'll make here an exception for oil (uranium was a
nice success story for me until Fukushima)-- No tech companies (except Apple, MSFT, Intel, but I shouldn't make any exceptions due to the lessons of AMD and STEC and BlackBerry)-- Lots of real estate (too much I would say), I don't want to buy
apartments to
rent but I like having a very, very small ownership from many of them through REITs — ETFs are good (unless they cover specific developing countries, eg.
If you want a more personal experience, some
nice canut - style
apartments, which are 19th - Century silk worker ateliers converted into livable lofts can be
rented directly from their owners on Airbnb.
What is really
nice about
renting a house or
apartment is that they usually include a kitchen and allows cutting your food costs.
This way you can
rent a
nice house or
apartment for the weekend, a week or a couple of weeks for rates that work out very cheaply when split between a group of you, and Housetrip offering lots of locations to find rentable accommodation, where costs can be split.
I love to mix
renting apartments for cheap, slow travel, with some nights in
nice hotels (especially those with 85 degree swimming pools, lady sized hotel slippers, and vegan options).
He looks in on the
nice young tech worker couple that is willing and able to pay three times the
rent he used to pay for his tiny studio
apartment, creating a portrait of how the city has changed.
For those who travel for a living or for the senior citizen enjoying retirement by touring the countryside, it is
nice to know the same premium that pays to protect your things at your
rented house or
apartment also watches over them on the road.
There are some very
nice luxury
apartments and condos around where I live and why would someone
rent a duplex or a single family home?
Englewood was once a
nice community but today just about anyone you get to
rent out an
apartment is not going to pay
rent.
My husband and I
rent a little beach
apartment, and we have made it uniquely ours — a little haven filled with a lot of love and
nice interior decor!