Cost of Ownership – Replacement and Maintenance Costs

Cost of Ownership – Replacement and Maintenance Costs

Last time we looked at PITIU (Principle, Interest, Taxes, Insurance, and Utilities) as a truer definition of total monthly housing costs. But if you’re also considering a resale home, there are other costs that need to be figured in.

Replacements. How would we expect the resale and new homes to compare, replacement cost-wise, over the next 10 years? A May 24, 2019, article in U.S. News & World Report identified the life expectancy of several key products in the home. We’ve added average quality product pricing to come up with the following:

Replacement Cost

Replacement product costs for the resale home come in at $22,500 higher, which equates to $187.50 per month on average more. Now, not every one of those items may need to be replaced on the resale home within the next 10 years, but the likelihood of needed replacement is much higher for the older home.

Maintenance costs are likely to be higher for the resale home. From repainting a few rooms to having the carpets and air ducts cleaned, there may be costs you incur soon after moving in. More expensive projects will probably occur much sooner as well, such as exterior painting or cleaning/sealing/staining the deck. Maintenance ignored will hasten even more expensive repairs, such as redoing concrete driveways and sidewalks or rebuilding a wood deck. Of course, you can save some of the cost by doing these things yourself – if you have the expertise, tools, and time.

Sherwin-Williams’ Harmony® paint contributes to cleaner indoor air quality by reducing VOC levels from potential sources like carpet, cabinets and fabrics. Harmony paint also works to help rooms stay fresher, longer, with odor eliminating technology that breaks down unwanted household odors. Photo courtesy: Sherwin-Williams

SW Bedroom ceiling

Your style. Then there’s the combination of your tastes coupled with the obsolescence inherent with a resale home. The previous owners may have loved those trendy light fixtures. You think they’re gaudy. Same goes for the bathroom mirrors. That big, deep, built-in entertainment center may have been perfect 20 years ago. Now it’s wasted space. The interior was repainted just before putting the home on the market – but mauve just isn’t your color. Yes, you can put up with these shortcomings for a while but compared to selecting what you want and having everything brand new, there are very real costs to settling for someone else’s choices. Plus, while something like changing out bathroom mirrors may be a project you can tackle, other projects may necessitate hiring professionals. You want to open the kitchen to the eating area and family room, but is that a load-bearing wall? Worse yet, it may be pretty much impossible to accomplish some tasks. So much for the 8-foot high basement ceiling you wanted.

Bathroom
Ceiling Fan
Bedroom

Most of us need to be budget-wise when considering buying a home. When looking at the monthly housing budget, we start with PITIU. But if you are considering new construction and resale homes, product replacements, maintenance and repairs, and updates that correspond with your preferences, have to be included when calculating the monthly housing budget for pre-owned homes. 

Next time we look at resale considerations when building new.

For more resources on thoughtful design and products:

Bathroom Photo: Courtesy of Artistic Tile
Ceiling Fan and Bedroom Photos by Renee D. Calvin Photography.

Cover photo: <a href=’https://www.freepik.com/photos/people’>People photo created by freepik – www.freepik.com</a>

 

Beyond Dollars – The Cost of Home Ownership

Beyond Dollars – The Cost of Home Ownership

Thinking about the cost of home ownership often resides in the “left brain,” which is associated with information, rational thinking, and analytics. Yet we feel other, very real costs, expressed in terms such as happiness/frustration, contentment/disappointment, or confidence/anxiety. Closely related to cost, William Poundstone points out in his book Priceless, “Though a price is just a number, it can evoke a complex set of emotions.” 

The cost of home ownership is more than what we pay in mortgage payments, utilities, maintenance, and repairs. What is the value of living in your dream home? A kitchen in which you can create masterpieces, enough storage that you can feel organized, and outdoor living space that’s fun for everyone?

Yes, we look at costs in terms of dollars. In lieu of the standard shower in the bedroom suite bathroom, the spa shower costs $3,000 more, about $16 higher per month in a 30-year mortgage at 5% APR. But your right-brain (feelings, emotions, story) reminds you that every day you’ll use that shower. It might be that you enjoy taking a hot, relaxing shower. It might be that you want to use the body sprays for an invigorating shower. It might be that you just don’t want to bump your elbows into the sides of the standard-size shower when washing your hair. How would that spa shower make you feel physically? How would it make you feel about yourself? Then there is its impact on resale – a future buyer may fall in love with that spa shower, the amenity that gets you a quicker sale at your full asking price.

 

The spa shower you want might be what clinches your home’s future resale!

Walk-in Shower

Whether we were forced into it or leapt at the opportunity, many of us got to experience firsthand the “joy” of working from home during the 2020 pandemic. Suddenly, we had a new appreciation for home office design. Size, location, privacy, natural light, storage, workspace, seating… even the trek to the bathroom all took on new meaning. Companies discovered some underappreciated benefits of having employees work remotely, too. Now, whether full-time or a couple days per week, millions more of us have jobs working from home. But at what “cost”? For our happiness…our sanity…our productivity, this may mean remodeling or even buying a new home, designed with the amenities and solutions for working from home we need and want. There are a few silver linings, such as the potential home office tax deduction, reduced commuting time and expenses, even “going to work” in your comfortable yoga pants. How do those things factor into the cost of home ownership?

Many of those same issues can be applied to home schooling. At the time this is being written, the jury is out on whether schools will return to their pre-pandemic “normal.” Some have already announced a remote or a hybrid approach, going to 2 or 3 classroom days per week, and issuing laptops or tablets to students for learning/studying at home.

Flex Space - Wall Bed

Flex spaces perfect for working from home/schooling from home became the new must-have amenity with the pandemic. This flex room with a wall bed is perfect for guest space and/or working/schooling from home. (Photo: Closet Factory)

If you have the time, the know-how, and the tools, you may be able to tackle costly maintenance and repair projects inherent in older homes. What is your time worth? If you lack the know-how, what’s the cost, in terms of time and frustration and money, of doing that repair twice? New homes give you back time, like not dusting the whirlpool tub you never use. Staying put, doing nothing seems safer, because we don’t often consider the high costs associated with inaction. 

On May 15, 2020, Seth Godin’s blog read, “The cost of something is largely irrelevant, people are paying attention to its value.” Once we learn to value how a new home can enrich the lives of everyone in our household, positively affect our health and our outlook, even grant our desire for enhanced livability and style, we can take a holistic look at the total cost of home ownership.

For more resources on thoughtful design and products:

Wall Bed/Flex Room Photo: Closet Factory

Cover Photo: <a href=’https://www.freepik.com/photos/coffee’>Coffee photo created by user18526052 – www.freepik.com</a>