{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"547: Home Ownership: The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly","description":"There\u2019s a moment most high-income professionals remember clearly. It\u2019s when the first real money finally starts coming in. If you\u2019re a doctor, it\u2019s when you finish residency training. And almost immediately, the world starts whispering in your ear: \u201cIt\u2019s time to buy a house.\u201d Not just any house. The nicest house the bank says you can afford. And that\u2019s where people unknowingly sabotage one of the most powerful wealth-building windows of their entire lives\u2026by becoming house poor. You see, the bank is not qualifying you based on what will make you wealthy. They\u2019re qualifying you based on what will maximize the size of your loan. If I could go back and do it again, I would have done something other than buy the great big house that I did. I would have bought a 3\u20134 unit property. I would have lived in one unit. And I would have let the other tenants pay for my life. This is an incredible strategy that almost no one uses. Yet, the government actively encourages it. FHA loans allow you to buy up to a four-unit property with as little as 3.5% down\u2014as long as you live in one of the units. Think about how different that is from buying a single-family home. Instead of writing a large check every month from your after-tax income to cover your mortgage, your tenants are covering most\u2014or sometimes all\u2014of it for you. Your biggest expense disappears. And when your biggest expense disappears, everything changes. You can invest more. You can take more risks. You can acquire more assets. You can build wealth instead of feeding a liability. And it gets even better. Even if you live in one of the units, the rental portion of the property is depreciable. In a four-unit building, roughly 75% of the structure qualifies. And with a cost segregation study, you can accelerate a huge portion of that depreciation into the first year using bonus depreciation. That means you may be able to take massive deductions in the first year\u2014deductions that can offset income and actually pay you back the down payment you made on the property in the first place. Meanwhile, your tenants are paying down your loan every month. You are living there. And you are building equity in a cash-flowing asset. It\u2019s almost like having someone else buy your first investment property for you\u2014while you live in it. And it gets better. When you\u2019re ready to upgrade\u2014to the nicer house, the one you actually want\u2014you don\u2019t sell this property. You move out. And suddenly, you own a fully stabilized rental property with favorable financing, built-in equity, and years of tax advantages ahead of it. This is how real estate portfolios actually start. Not with some massive leap\u2014but with a smart first step. There\u2019s also another version of this strategy that\u2019s incredibly powerful. Buying a property that can function as a short-term rental. In the right markets, short-term rentals can generate significantly more income than traditional leases, while still providing depreciation benefits that improve your after-tax returns. The core idea is simple. Early in your career, your job isn\u2019t to look rich. It\u2019s to build the machine that makes you rich. And nothing slows that process down faster than becoming house poor. Your primary residence, by itself, is not an investment. It\u2019s a consumption item. It requires constant feeding\u2014mortgage payments, taxes, insurance, maintenance, repairs. But a small multifamily property flips that equation. It produces income. It produces tax advantages. It produces optionality. Instead of draining your resources, it accelerates your financial progress. Looking back, this is one of the highest-probability, lowest-risk wealth-building moves I could have made. And for those early in their careers today, it remains one of the smartest first financial decisions you can make. As for buying your dream home? You have the rest of your life for that. And there is a lot you need to think about before pulling the trigger. This week\u2019s Wealth Formula Podcast gets into the real data behind home ownership across the country: the trends, the psychology and the invisible costs.&amp;nbsp; Whether you own a home now or not, this is information you need to know. 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