I have made the decision to buy a house, but I don't know the first thing about doing it. My experience with real estate is limited to watching random shows on HGTV (usually with people with absurdly large budgets that I will probably never have).
In all likelihood I won't really be starting anything until next year. But in that time, I want to do all I can to make sure I'm ready to buy a house (and hope that Obama brings back the homebuyer tax credit

).
Now, I realize most of you are going to say, "Talk to a professional," but I was just wondering if anybody here has any advice or stories from when you first bought a house.
Buy a condo or a townhouse. That's what I want, I hate all this maintenance that goes along with owning a home. After this big storm we just had this weekend, I have to call my home owners insurance company, then find a roofer, then a fence guy... it all sucks. Than a landscaper for spring clean-up and fix my yard.
I long for the easy life.
Nah, that's one of the reasons I want a house. I love doing all that kind of work myself. I might even buy a crappy house just so I can fix it up.
Normally,
JW and I don't see eye-to-eye; however, in this case I have to agree with him 100% and also point out that you're reasons are purely emotional. You seem to be buying into the so-called
American Dream where everyone (allegedly) aspires to own a house with the picket fence. Before the housing bubble burst (this most recent one), people on this board scoffed when I pointed out that renting is not evil and that home ownership is not for everyone.
Contrary to what you may think, there are many, many caveats, the first of which are location, location, and finally, location. You've already moved twice in a 12 months period, correct? Are you absolutely certain that you will be staying put for the next 10+ years, because statistic will show that you're going to move *at least* two more times in the next 10 years. If you buy a house with a 30 year note (aka financial suicide) and then have to move in 5 years, you'll basically have pissed in the wind with zero financial gain, and in which case you'd have been better off renting. Then, take into account such issues as maintenance (roofing repair/replacement, HVAC maintenance/replacement, annual taxes, other household repairs, annual insurance) and suddenly, you're paycheck is shrinking.
Are you willing to buy a fixer-upper, work on it, and then possibly flip it down the road so that you can move to something more upscale, or do you think you'd stay put?
The one following advice I can give you is, A) have 20-25% for a down payment, B) 15-year note (NO ARMs), C) a mortgage of NO MORE THAN 25% of your paycheck, D) bi-weekly payments to pay it off faster. Sorry, but the so-called tax advantage of deducting mortgage interest is a joke. Pay the house off early and then sock away money for retirement. Even 1.5% interest earned is better than no interest.
It's admirable you want a house, but be certain it's for the right reasons. A condo, townhouse, or even continued renting are not something to be scorned.