Exploring the Apartment
Where I Work
This is my desk where I work.
Taken on Thursday February 14, 2008 at Exploring the Apartment.Happy Flag Day
I'm display old glory on this beautiful morning. Are you?
Taken on Wednesday June 14, 2017 at Exploring the Apartment.The 20-Minute Daily Clean Routine Thatβll Give You Your Weekends Back
Weekends should be for recharging, not for catching up on work we didn’t get to during the week. This includes housework. While we like the end result, cleaning the house (for most of us) isn’t a fun or relaxing endeavor. To get to your housework to-dos before the weekend, commit to cleaning for 15 to 20 minutes five days a week. Then welcome freedom — and a tidy home — when Friday night comes.
A successful weekday-only cleaning regime relies on two categories of cleaning tasks: ones that you repeat every day as a matter of habit and ones that you do once a week.
7 Homeowner Costs Renters Donβt Pay
Why I choose to rent π‘
Why I choose to rent π‘
I like my rundown, inexpensive apartment in the suburbs where I can take the bus to work, walk down to the library or the park and aren’t dependent on driving everywhere.
While money spent on rent will never be recovered, many costs of homeownership are unrecoverable:
- Interest and bank fees that tenants don’t pay or if they do indirectly it’s split among tenants
- Maintenance costs are responsibility of landlord, no need to buy your own lawnmower or power tools
- Higher costs to heat and electric power for a full house compared to small apartment
- Higher property taxes on house compared to what is embedded in rent for an apartment
- Fuel and greater wear and tear on my truck if I lived in outlaying area rather then somewhere I can walk or take a bus
Now, I get my apartment is not nice. But the location is great and the rent inexpensive. The savings on many of the expenses allows me to save more towards retirement and general investments. Money that would be lost on higher utility bills, commuting costs, and maintance costs. I look forward to in the future being able to purchase my off-grid property with cash, which will save enormously on financing over bank financing.
Rural land can be relatively inexpensive, especially if you are looking at small cabins that are on dirt roads with electricity or running water a long ways from a city in a low tax state. It’s amazing how far $200,000 can go at buying land in a place like rural Missouri or Nebraska or anywhere else in the Mid-West — or even more off the beat places in true west (not North Idaho these days).
Measuring the stress in the rental industry | FRED Blog
The pandemic has tormented many sectors of the economy. The sector we highlight today is rental companies, whose income is captured in the Quarterly Services Survey of the U.S. Census Bureau.
This survey covers only a sample of the rental sector: businesses that employ workers but not, for example, individual landlords. Also, the space being rented may be apartments, residential houses, or commercial real estate. But these data can still be a good proxy for the entire real estate rental industry.
What’s clear from the RE graph above is that income in this sector has dropped considerably during the pandemic. It was obvious that there would be effects from the nationwide eviction moratorium for unpaid rent. It is unclear, though, whether this is the only mechanism at work here, as there are also reports of substantial moves from rented apartments to owned houses. Regardless, this drop in rental income is unprecedented. The sector is recuperating now, and we’ll be watching to see when it returns to its pre-pandemic level.