AllistonGT
Well-known member
There was one of those in the Shoppers World Brampton parking lot as well back in the 70's.
Not bad,When and if ever that time comes, I think I will buy a property strictly for renting out. My current rent is $1296 in East York. 1 Bedroom 1 washroom, all utilities + parking in, with a pool.
Its going to be tough convincing some of the people here. They dont seem to understand how housing being 10-20 times what the average person earns makes it FAR harder than when they bought and it was 2-4x.$250K+ is far from normal. You'd have to move to the Bay Area and have considerable experience and/or a nice resume for that. The programmers I work with make ~$100K (I haven't asked for exact details). Your friend is either trying to draw extremely top talent, you're remembering incorrectly, or he's exaggerating slightly.
The parents -> kids thing is how most kids are getting ahead these days, since despite what some folks are claiming in this thread, it was easier to get ahead as a boomer and they are able to shell massive amounts of cash out to fund kids' fancy cars or nice apartments. It was actually common in my wife's program to have people's parents cover their costs, which equated to about $150-180k of loans not being required. These kids now don't have any debt, so their amount of disposable income is substantially higher than someone carrying that debt. My point is that these sorts of things are furthering the income gap and the space between the haves and have nots.
My mom worked in a factory and was able to make six figures. In some of her peak years she made up to $120k. She only had her GED.
It depends how hard you want to work. I have 2 kids in their 20s working, they both make $100, they work hard and smart. One is a tradesman, he invested in a company which he now owns, he pays himself $3K a week and reinvests some into his company every month. The younger one is 3 years out of university, he hit 6 figures this year as a regional unit manager for a very large building supply company. They work hard and reap the rewards.Its going to be tough convincing some of the people here. They dont seem to understand how housing being 10-20 times what the average person earns makes it FAR harder than when they bought and it was 2-4x.
They certainly didnt have "investors" from China buying several houses at a time back then either, nor did they have our real estate advertised in Chinese magazines.
All the "young" people I know who bought the past several years all had help from their parents.
One guy lived at home until age 32, has never payed a penny for rent or food at home, parents paid off his whole engineering + master degrees.
Another guy isnt even educated but his parents gave him 100K for a down payment.
You wont find many people in their mid 20s that are able to afford rent, pay off education debt and save for the massive down payment required.
Is it do-able? Yeah maybe if your making 100K+. But what % of 25-30 years olds make 100K? Id venture a guess at around 5%.
I rent in Barrie, 3 bed 1.5 bath townhouse with a big garage. $1560+ everything. So far rent hasn't risen in 3 years.Not bad,
i'm renting in North York; 2 bedroom townhouse with finished basement, 1 bathroom, $1,550 all in (rent has remained the same for 3 years ). Guy i ride with (nice guy), told me he just bought a condo near Don Mills and York Mills, 1bedroom/1 bath. Wants to rent it out for $2200, i laughed. Sad thing is he'll probably find someone desperate enough.
It depends how hard you want to work. I have 2 kids in their 20s working, they both make $100, they work hard and smart. One is a tradesman, he invested in a company which he now owns, he pays himself $3K a week and reinvests some into his company every month. The younger one is 3 years out of university, he hit 6 figures this year as a regional unit manager for a very large building supply company. They work hard and reap the rewards.
My kids hang with their high school friends, the ones who work hard are doing well. The whiners... not so well. Funny thing is this was the same for my dad in the 60,s and me in the 80s. Work hard, be dependable, and take the tough assignments nobody wants -- the path to $100K isn't that hard.
In my neighborhood the land is worth more if the house has been removed.
It’s all relative. 30 years ago, Milton was farm land and anyone living there was considered living in the country. Land was cheap. And no one wanted to live there. The burbs was Mississauga.
The trick is to find the next “Milton” for today.
I grew up around here (milton) and loved living here 30yrs ago. Land was cheap, we had maxed out the water supply so new construction was very limited.
Now we are growing south and will hit Oakville soon, there is a green space buffer between Mississauga and us, but who knows for how long??
The trick for me is to find the next 'milton' , not for value, to have the quiet life back....
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I like it, where is it?Want to see the nicest house in Toronto:
is still there.
yep, 201 Winchester street, that's almost all that is left of Riverdale Zoo.I like it, where is it?
EDIT:
nevermind, riverdale farm.
Trudeau just said he's going to let migrant workers do other jobs, creating more pressure on wages to keep them low. The younger generation of Canadians is getting royally screwed.