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    HomeTop Stories'Cheaper doesn't mean better': Millennial couple bought their first home in 2021...

    ‘Cheaper doesn’t mean better’: Millennial couple bought their first home in 2021 for $195,500—now they regret it


    Robert Giametta, 33, and Christopher Luquer, 31, were living in a two-bedroom apartment in Kingston, New York, and paying $850 a month in rent when the covid-19 pandemic struck.

    Interest rates were low and “I thought if we don’t buy a house now then we probably won’t be able to buy one in the future.” Giametta tells CNBC Make It.

    The couple started their search in the Summer of 2020. They knew they wanted to stay within 40 minutes of Kingston, where Luquer worked as a revenue cycle specialist. Giametta, a process improvement analyst, worked remotely.

    “We wanted to find a house that the mortgage wasn’t going to be sky high,” Giametta says. “We wanted to renovate.”

    The Cairo, New York house is a little over 1,000 square feet and sits on 0.69 acres.

    Robert Giametta

    Giametta and Luquer were also sure that they wanted a three-bedroom house so they could use one as a craft room.

    The couple toured four houses, put an offer in on the first one they saw — and were outbid. Eventually, they decided on a three-bedroom one-and-a-half bedroom one-level house in Cairo, New York for $195,500. At a little over 1,000 square feet, the house also has a two-car garage and a back deck and sits on 0.69 acres.

    Built in 1970, Giametta says the property was in really good condition, but in a rural area.

    “We were a little bit nervous at how rural it was, but we convinced ourselves that it would be fun,” he says. “[The home] was only slightly outdated, so when we saw it, we thought it would be really easy to update and wouldn’t cost that much money.”

    “It was the perfect starter home and was a little bit better than the other ones that we saw for the price,” he added.

    The couple painted and added shelves to the living room.

    Robert Giametta

    The two closed on the house in January 2021 with a down payment of about $6,000. They secured a monthly mortgage of $1,300 with a total FHA loan of $192,000.

    Giametta and Luquer moved in that same month. “I couldn’t believe that we owned a house. I’m a millennial, so it’s not something that seemed achievable for us, but it happened,” Giametta says. “It was really surreal, and it felt really good to know we had overcome this huge hurdle of our generation.”

    “It was emotional because we lived in apartments and had horrible experiences with neighbors and landlords, so it was nice that we didn’t have anyone over us,” he adds.

    ‘We started to feel like we’re all alone up here’

    Moving On



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