James Altucher, director of Formula Financial and author of The Altucher Confidential, thinks it's a bad idea to own a house.  Each of Altucher's points can, (and should) be rebutted.
A) Cash Gone - True you have to pay interest and other fees on a  mortgage, and that cash is gone.  But it's even worse for renting.   Before I bought my home, I rented various apartments for 14 years.  Over  those 14 years, I paid a total of $100,000 in rent.  If those had been  mortgage payments, instead of rent checks, I might have built a few  thousand dollars in equity.  But they were rent checks, and all of that money's gone.
B) Closing costs - This is the one area where the Altucher has a good  point.  Closing costs can be onerous - which is why many people advise  that if you'll be in a house for less than 5 years, you should rent.   (The closing costs are more than the equity you would build over 5  years.)
C) Maintenance - OK, it sounds nice to live in an apartment or condo,  where theoretically everything's taken care of.  But you can't always  trust a landlord to fix things right and in a timely fashion.  The  bathroom vent fan stops working - you call the office - they come by and  remove the vent, leaving a gaping hole in your bathroom.  Weeks, then  months go by, and despite your phone calls, the hole is still there.   This happened to me in one of the apartments I rented.  It's the old  mantra "if you want something done right, do it yourself."
D) Taxes - You CAN, in fact, deduct mortgage interest from your federal  income taxes.  It's not a myth.  I do it every year.  Furthermore, landlords pay local property taxes, and they pass those taxes on to tenants as part of their rent.
E) You're Trapped - You can't just up and decide to leave one day,  because you have to sell the house.  Renting isn't the panacea Altucher  would have you believe - if you break your lease to leave early, it can  be costly.  But the real question is: is it really that bad to be locked  into a house?  If the neighborhood is stable and safe, and you have  friends there, why are you so eager to leave?  Do you really want to  uproot your children and put them in a new school every few years?
(And I wonder if Altucher actually studied history before he gave his  rant about how big corporations fomented the "myth of homeownership" as a  way to keep workers from moving.  The 19th century industrial town was  built around renting.  Factory owners built houses, and rented those houses out to workers as a way to take back their wages.)
F) Ugly - As in, ugly investment. Maybe houses are really ugly  investments.  But a house is much more than just an investment.  It's a  home.  It is a reflection your personality and lifestyle choices.  It's  yours to personalize.  Whether that means painting it your favorite  color, or covering it in beer cans - you can't do that to a rental.
The decision to buy versus rent is a matter of  personal choice.  I think Altucher got caught up in the financial  aspects of it (he is a financial expert after all) - but there's a lot  more to the decision.  It's up to each of us to educate ourselves, and make our own decisions.
 
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