wow. you've thought about this before huh?Graney said:I did the math.
For $15'000 (or less, potentially even free) you can get land in... all sorts of places.
According to this website: http://www.sheds.com.au/process/views/catalogueItemB.html?itemId=8941&categoryId=1279
You can buy a complete 2 bedroom kit home for $19'450.
You get the $21'000 first home builders grant for this, so the house comes free. It'll cost you X amount to get it kitted out, X being the value of construction, plumbing, electrical, taxes etc...
Let's suppose you pay $15'000 for a 1/4 acre of land, plus X= $20'000 to get your new home kitted out.
And there you have it. A complete new home, paid for in full, on a years minimum wage salary.
The only downside is you have to live in a shed in the middle of nowhere.
Being a creepy loner, who's completely rejected all traditional notions of success, and finds the idea of wealth, consumption, capitalist 9 to 5 mindset absolutely meaningless, I am seriously considering this scheme. Once I don't have to pay rent, I think I can get my annual expenses down to <$6000, and can pretty much retire.
where are some of these "all sorts of places"?Graney said:I did the math.
For $15'000 (or less, potentially even free) you can get land in... all sorts of places.
According to this website: http://www.sheds.com.au/process/views/catalogueItemB.html?itemId=8941&categoryId=1279
You can buy a complete 2 bedroom kit home for $19'450.
You get the $21'000 first home builders grant for this, so the house comes free. It'll cost you X amount to get it kitted out, X being the value of construction, plumbing, electrical, taxes etc... Ofcourse I have mates who are tradies, who should do us a reasonable deal...
Let's suppose you pay $15'000 for a 1/4 acre of land, plus X= $20'000 to get your new home kitted out.
And there you have it. A complete new home, paid for in full, on a years minimum wage salary.
The only downside is you have to live in a shed in the middle of nowhere.
Being a creepy loner, who's completely rejected all traditional notions of success, and finds the idea of wealth, consumption, capitalist 9 to 5 mindset absolutely meaningless, I am seriously considering this scheme. Once I don't have to pay rent, I think I can get my annual expenses down to <$6000, and can pretty much retire.
Not having the worries of paying for rent and associated expenses would easily knock $10,000 off her living expenses.lala2 said:The newly registered pharmacist at my work has gotten a mortgage on a unit with good views in Wollstonecraft. She's only one year out of uni. How did she manage this? She had a uni scholarship so that's minimum $5k/year (and I think she's the UAI of 99.95 one but I didn't dare ask further, which would make it $10k/yr) for 4 years = min $20k at the end. She invested it all in the stockmarket and sold all her shares just before the current economic crisis, so she got a very good return. She lived at home during uni, and during her mortgage application, so the only expenses she had was her phone and shopping/personal expenses. As a prereg, her annual income is about $38k pre-tax. So, it was only a matter of ticking all the boxes before getting the mortgage. Plus, she saved $60k on the unit due to falling property prices. Now that's how you get a place of your own first year out of uni.