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I'm curious as to why you weren't in a fixed rate mortgage.
Maybe it's tax and insurance increases. That's what I'm seeing.
If it's 600 per month (as I am assuming), and it was split evenly between taxes and insurance, that would mean an increase in taxes of 3600 and insurance by 3600. My insurance for the entire year isn't even close to that. My taxes went up on my million dollar (thanks to a nearly 50% increaseduring the pandemic) by 5%, which is less than 40 dollars a month. So I find it hard to believe that it is just the taxes and the insurance.
As I said, I was assuming they meant per month, but I could be wrong and it's only 600 for the year. But then if a 50$ increase per month in expenses pushed them the edge, they were never in a really comfortable territory to begin with.
I'm at a fixed rate and my mortgage went up by $1200 a month. Mostly due to taxes increasing so drastically. They didn't forecast the increase being so much so that caused problems in itself.
I'm calling bs. Post the numbers cuz this is laughable unless you have an ARM
This happens though. Property values increase around you and suddenly grand dad’s pension won’t cover land taxes.
Only place I’ve hear this happening so drastically is in Cali.
Nope. In California property taxes only go up when the property is sold. You will be taxed based on the sale price of your home as long as you own it. This is the result of a law (voter initiative?) passed a long time ago.
Yeah, hard agree with you. Median tax per year is $2000-$6000, depending on state. There's no room for a $1200 per month increase in there unless you live in a house way above median.
The only way I see those numbers working out is if the house's tax assessment increased in value by a million dollars in a single year.