captainspoke wrote: ↑Wed Feb 23, 2022 10:43 am
Ori wrote: ↑Wed Feb 23, 2022 5:28 am
Bubblegun wrote: ↑Wed Feb 23, 2022 4:05 am
I often wonder what the definition is Slightly used means in Japan.
For me around 20 years is slightly used.LOL although in Japan I expect its, last week.LOL.
Around 0-5 yrs I'd say.
Many foreigners (including myself) start house hunting thinking that they are smarter than "stupid" Japanese and will make a great deal buying a 15-25 yrs old house for a price of a land and will have a comfortable life there. Well, Japanese are not stupid and prefer new houses for a simple reason that typical Japanese house is not build to last and furthermore, Japanese building standards (particularly, insulation) were much worse in the past (and are still not great).
Also, that's when stuff around the house, like water heater starts breaking, roof and wall maintenance are needed etc. Often, buying a prefab house or building an inexpensive custom house is a better deal.
I disagree. @Bubblegun--reread my post on the first page. We didn't think we were smarter, we just thought a house would be nice. We had only the faintest glimmer that it was old enough that we were only buying it for the price of the land. We hadn't even looked at many places, and this one just seemed good enough. Price, rather than condition, was the major factor.
We've thought about moving, or rather I have. The main problem with most any house I look at is the kitchens--and
this is especially true with any new house on the market. It's depressing--houses that might be acceptable in most other ways have kitchens that look like they were designed/laid out by someone who has never cooked, let alone spent any time in one.
A kitchen should be "U" shaped--and the sink, the stove, and the refrigerator should form a triangle--and no two of them should be in a line. One common fault of pre-made (new) houses is a giant sink (wow!
) and almost no counter space to prep anything.
https://i.imgur.com/lrdlWXA.jpg <--To get that kind of kitchen in a new house, it'd have to be architect-designed, and even if they understood and got it right (ha!), the budget would be creaking and about to break. And that's a kitchen in a 55-year old house. (It should have been a deep bay window, more shelf space, instead of what's there.)
One positive I see is that your wife seems okay with an older house. One negative, is that you don't have any DIY background. But youtube is your friend, a great resource.
Sorry if I misunderstood. I heard some non Japanese think they can buy cheap and somehow make huge profits.
I understand what your saying. For me it’s mostly about the deposit I have, and also my age and then carrying that loan for…however many years.
Buying a house when your a young “Japanese” salaryman is fine, but I certainly have some doubts. I even squeaked at the mortgage guy saying we can apply for a loan and just pop in 35 years just to make it look smaller.
Now there is no way on this island, planet of universe and I working doing head shoulders knees and toes at 80, 90 years old. In fact I’ll probably be lucky to even touch my own knees and toes at that age. So the cunning plan is ( according to Baldrick) to have the lot paid off by 65.
I’ve seen two places that a company has renovated which were ok. The other one we saw looked like it came from Hiroshima, and was half way up what seemed like Mount Fuji. So the wife kicked it into touch.
Instead of buying a smaller new place,
I don’t mind buying an older property with more space/ garden, and spending another 5 million improving it.
Even though I’ve been here for what seems an eternity I realize I’m culturally illiterate when it comes to buying a property here. So I’m glad everyone is chipping in, and keeping me in the rails. The wife isn’t really one for reading up on this stuff. But I do think that cheap will either mean it’s in the middle of nowhere, or closer to the town but really bad condition. and expensive might mean a matchbox nearer the city.
Two things for sure that will be done on what ever we find is
1 a new kitchen
2 a new bathroom.
The wife thinks we could borrow the money from the bank.
Baldrick. Trying to save the world.