Perpetual Beast
Beast Mode Always On
It all depends..... it really does.
Rent, if you're willing to make sacrifices,( which if you're young you should since these are the years where you have energy to put in big hours) can be great for having/saving immediate funds. This is the coli, so everyone here is the second coming of Mark Cuban and have all these big ideas for companies they want to start, but for the realistic 2% that aren't mental masturbators and actually get shyt done, you can see why having immediate capital would be a better investment vs say a home.
You're a computer technician, have excellent expertise/mastery, but know in order to take it to the next level you're going to need some cash; 20k to expand vs 20k on a down payment. One of these will prove to have a higher ROI in a shorter time frame.
Owning a home is always ideal in the sense that, if you lost everything tomorrow, at least you have your ass covered because you have collateral. Also, the obvious of the equity and "paying yourself", etc.
Point is...it's not as black and white as folks are making it seem in this thread (no pun intended) and depending on circumstances it could go either way.
Rent, if you're willing to make sacrifices,( which if you're young you should since these are the years where you have energy to put in big hours) can be great for having/saving immediate funds. This is the coli, so everyone here is the second coming of Mark Cuban and have all these big ideas for companies they want to start, but for the realistic 2% that aren't mental masturbators and actually get shyt done, you can see why having immediate capital would be a better investment vs say a home.
You're a computer technician, have excellent expertise/mastery, but know in order to take it to the next level you're going to need some cash; 20k to expand vs 20k on a down payment. One of these will prove to have a higher ROI in a shorter time frame.
Owning a home is always ideal in the sense that, if you lost everything tomorrow, at least you have your ass covered because you have collateral. Also, the obvious of the equity and "paying yourself", etc.
Point is...it's not as black and white as folks are making it seem in this thread (no pun intended) and depending on circumstances it could go either way.
i have a yard, i built a fire pit, i built a garden and grow flowers and vegetables. i used to have a pitbull and a GF in a 2BR and no space and now i have a giant basement full of music gear and golf stuff and all kinds of shyt. i mean i'm going to have this place paid off in 14 years and by then i'll be 46
but then i'll sell it and buy another one.




I forget this is the Coli sometimes, reality is the average American retires around 65, on the Coli everyone is retiring before 45 because they're all real estate czars that have amassed a huge portfolio of buildings and land.
