• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

How old were you when you bought your first house?

For me...
20.
Thru 50 years of martial bliss we now
live in a nice home. Each move has been a step up. Started out with a
used 12 x 60 mobile home.
This is our 5th house on one acre.
Paid for....
 
I don’t pretend to know all of the elements affecting today’s house buying and young people. What I do know is I have three adult children with ample income that are simply not motivated to buy a house. I think it’s some combination of deferred adulting and home ownership being a bunch of work.

Just an observation.
It’s complicated. Economic forces create shifting tides, where sometimes it makes little sense to own, and others where it’s the opposite. My daughter and her husband want to build home equity, and have good incomes.

I advised them to hold back. They live in free housing provided by her husband’s job with the state of PA, and have at least another move for career in the cards.
 
I betcha the chart you posted has the same downward angle as to how much the dollar bought from back then till now.

When you have more of a commodity, it is worth less. IE print more dollars out of thin air with nothing really backing it but "the full faith and credit of the United States" and each dollar will be worth less.
educated guesses & the #s
1977 prices

*yeah gas was $0.59 cents
(not nearly $5)
*my DMV reg. for my car/truck was like $24
(now about $1500 for the 3)
*a loaf of wheat bread was probably about the same, $0.59 cents
(now $4)
*a gallon of milk was like $0.85
(? $4)
*a dozen eggs $0.85 cents
($6 for 18 ?)
*a six pack of Buds or Lowenbrau was Less than $2,
Luckys Lager were like $1.29
(Sam Adams $7)
*steaks like $1.50 # for good steak & whole big chicken for $0.99 cents
(now for 2 I pay $250+ in meat a month)
*my PG&E bill was like $45
(not $300+ like today)
*cable bill was like $29, I got every channel
(not almost $300 like now, for tv, int. & phone bundel)
*phone was like PacBell $45 & extra for every long distance call
(I think it's far cheaper for a land line or cell today, w/no long distance charges)
*my car/truck insurance wasn't much cheaper oddly,
that I pay now, about $800 a year
you get the gest

*a $7 an hr income went way farther then,
than 40-ish years later a $154 (gross) an hr billing rate did, when I retired
cleared far less than 1/3rd
(more like 1/4 or less after personal income taxes alone, just 1 of the taxes I paid)
& then add pension contribution, liability ins., trucks ins., payroll, fuel (big one)
property taxes, office, other employees & all Workmans comp ins.
(W/C alone was near $20/per $100 20%, after 1 faked fraud injury),
when I retired, my gross income was like 22 times more, but the net, it'd buy far less...
 
Last edited:
I was married and 25. Had been in an apartment about 6 months and couldn't stand it. Found an ugly house and had to decide in 3 hours if we wanted it. Paid $97k for it in 1986. Neighbors were so happy we bought as it was truly the ugliest house on the street. It had been a rental and was, shall we say..."well worn" haha! Couldn't open a window as they would literally fall out. It took us 3 months working on it at night before we could even move in!

Worked on every inch of that house, mostly elbow grease and flooring and almost doubled our money when we sold it 9 years later. Had it mostly paid off so used that on a house we designed and had built for us. Raised our kids their and sold it in 2023 after 28 years to move from Detroit to Florida. Downsized the house we had built down here BUT got a pool and my 1700 ft2 shop (too small!!).

The good Lord took great care of us and we're VERY thankful for where we live and the place we have now.
 
educated guesses & the #s
1977 prices

yeah gas was $0.59 cents
my reg. for my car/truck was like $24
a loaf of bread was probably about the same, $0.59 cents
a gallon of milk was like $0.85
a dozen eggs $0.85 cents
a six pack of Buds was Less than $2, Luckys were like $1.29
steaks (like $1.50 #) & whole chicken (for $0.99 cents)
my PG&E bill was like $45 (not $300+ like today)
cable bill was like $29
(not almost $300 like now, for tv, int. & phone)
phone was like $45 & extra for every long distance call
( I think it's far cheaper for a land line or cell today, w/no long distance charges)
my car/truck insurance wasn't much cheaper oddly, that I pay now, about $800 a year
a $7 an hr income went way farther then,
than 40-ish years later a $154 (gross) an hr billing rate did, when I retired
cleared far less than 1/2 (more like 1/4 after taxes alone)
& then add pension contribution, liability ins., trucks ins., payroll, fuel (big one)
office & Workmans comp ins. (alone was near $20/per $100, after 1 fake fraud injury),
when I retired, my gross income was like 22 times more, but the net, it'd buy far less...
PG&E....
Lived and grew up in Santa Rosa.
Maybe that's where pride and drive
we're instilled. Different times back
then. The ol' man would of kicked
my *** for being disrespectful.
 
I was married and 25. Had been in an apartment about 6 months and couldn't stand it. Found an ugly house and had to decide in 3 hours if we wanted it. Paid $97k for it in 1986. Neighbors were so happy we bought as it was truly the ugliest house on the street. It had been a rental and was, shall we say..."well worn" haha! Couldn't open a window as they would literally fall out. It took us 3 months working on it at night before we could even move in!

Worked on every inch of that house, mostly elbow grease and flooring and almost doubled our money when we sold it 9 years later. Had it mostly paid off so used that on a house we designed and had built for us. Raised our kids their and sold it in 2023 after 28 years to move from Detroit to Florida. Downsized the house we had built down here BUT got a pool and my 1700 ft2 shop (too small!!).

The good Lord took great care of us and we're VERY thankful for where we live and the place we have now.
I can certainly relate. There's no
substitute for pride of ownership.
Sort of like restoring your first Mopar.
 
PG&E....
Lived and grew up in Santa Rosa.
Maybe that's where pride and drive
we're instilled. Different times back
then. The ol' man would of kicked
my *** for being disrespectful.
Glad to have the job right out of HS, paid way better...
I worked for PG&E for a couple years, construction GC dept. 1st,
then at power plants operators, then welding & machine shop IBEW
then an Engineers aid, in freaken' downtown SF & I hated it...
(got to train my uneducated unqualified replacement, for affirmative action)

I got tired of the BS,
I left happy, went out on my own, never looked back...
 
1977 prices:
a $7 an hr income went way farther then,
than 40-ish years later

Don’t know what you did at that time, or how old you were, but my first full time job in 1976 paid $2.15/hour. Way more than any of my friends. Doing the math on my first paycheck showed I was paid $2.10/hour. Mustered the courage to talk to the owner to ask for my additional 5 cents an hour as we agree too. He grumbled then agreed.

My kids never even look at their “pay stub”. Ugh. Everything is different. I’m sure my parents felt the exact same way.
 
Our boy and his wife are on their second house.

He is 34, she is 33. 2 kids, 5 and 3.

They sold the first at a profit and now have what I call a McMansion- 3000 sf 2 story on a .2 acre lot.

Good for them, though.
 
Glad to have the job right out of HS, paid way better...
I worked for PG&E for a couple years, construction GC dept. 1st,
then at power plants operators, then welding & machine shop IBEW
then an Engineers aid, in freaken' downtown SF & I hated it...
(got to train my uneducated unqualified replacement, for affirmative action)

I got tired of the BS,
I left happy, went out on my own, never looked back...
Similar tracks? I worked for PNM
in Albq for 12 years in their fleet
department. Loved that job.
Rewrote every spec for fleet
standards. Trenchers, backhoes,
digger/Derrick, reel trucks, fleet
pickups and sedans.
Got to spend lots of the companies
money...
 
Don’t know what you did at that time, or how old you were, but my first full time job in 1976 paid $2.15/hour. Way more than any of my friends. Doing the math on my first paycheck showed I was paid $2.10/hour. Mustered the courage to talk to the owner to ask for my additional 5 cents an hour as we agree too. He grumbled then agreed.

My kids never even look at their “pay stub”. Ugh. Everything is different. I’m sure my parents felt the exact same way.

My 1st job was $1.65 an hr/min. wage to start
Paul Petterson Shell, Georgetown Ca. in HS, I started in 1974
mostly filling logging trucks w/diesel, 100's of gals,
& then cleaning windshield
& mud sprayed off the bottom while I was waiting
(so they didn't get ticketed by CHP)
I got a bunch of tips, from drivers like $10-$20 a day
$2 here & there, sometimes $5, it way more than my reg. pay was
&
I also worked for my dad's construction co., building doing decks & awnings
week ends, he cut me lose for $2.50 an hr to start & like $5 a while later

the job for $7.05 an hr was a $6.15 an hr job base pay, with a $0.90 cent bump
for knowing how to drive equipment, I grew up on ranches in my family
I worked for the NorCal Electric Co.'s PG&E construction GC dept. IBEW Union
started in 1977, I thought I was walking in 'high cotton', I felt rich, after working
for 1/3 or 1/4 of that, prior...
For a teenage kid it was decent $$$
did it for a couple years, then went to school, become an engineer
well sort of...

I did Ice delivery for a while too, started like $10 an hr

Yeah it was a different time/era,
I think we appreciated it more 'somehow' too
by 1981-82ish (at 22-23 y/o) in the summer breaks,
I was making like $20 an hr, piece work construction jobs
before I went out on my own, started my own business/s framing & plumbing...
Never looked back...
 
Last edited:
My 1st job was $1.65 an hr/min. wage to start
Paul Petterson Shell, Georgetown Ca. in HS, I started in 1974
mostly filling logging trucks w/diesel, 100's of gals,
& then cleaning windshield
& mud sprayed off the bottom while I was waiting
(so they didn't get ticketed by CHP)
I got a bunch of tips, from drivers like $10-$20 a day
$2 here & there, sometimes $5, it way more than my reg. pay was
&
I also worked for my dad's construction co., building doing decks & awnings
week ends, he cut me lose for $2.50 an hr to start & like $5 a while later

the job for $7.05 an hr was a $6.15 an hr job base pay, with a $0.90 cent bump
for knowing how to drive equipment, I grew up on ranches in my family
I worked for the NorCal Electric Co.'s PG&E construction GC dept. IBEW Union
started in 1977, I thought I was walking in 'high cotton', I felt rich, after working
for 1/3 or 1/4 of that, prior...
For a teenage kid it was decent $$$
did it for a couple years, then went to school, become an engineer
well sort of...

Yeah it was a different time/era,
I think we appreciated it more 'somehow' too
by 1981 (at 22 y/o) I was making like $20 an hr, piece work
before I went out on my own, started my own business/s framing & plumbing...
Never looked back...
Isn't it shittin' in high cotton?? At least that's how always heard it. LOL
 
I bought my first house at 22 for $20,000, but I never lived in it. I rented it out and bought the one next door the a year later, and rented it out.

By the time I was 25 I owned 3 houses. When I bought the 4th house my parents decided it was time for me to occupy it.

I was okay with living at home, but once I moved into my own place I instantly wished I had done it years earlier.

They let me get a good start in life and I sure wouldn't be where I am today had they not.

Tom
 
dually noted :lol:
dually noted :poke: the 2 of us
sorry, I couldn't resist, a lil' Kern got into me

a duly

& a dually
2002 F350 Powr Stroke Diesel Dually & 27' Jayco Designer Trailer 003.JPG
 
25. In Glendale California. Took everything I was earning at the time. Think the interest rate was 10%. I couldn’t even believe they gave me the mortgage. Sold it 10 years later because of a job transfer. Did ok.
Think it’s a 2m dollar house now.
 
MIGHT BE BORING! Bought our first house October of 1971. 912 square feet. 14,500.00. Interest rate was 5% I think. My salary didn’t meet the requirements for government approved loan. We did get the loan through a bank as long as we agreed to rent out the basement suite.g
It had a basement suite, which we were able to use as a help to get the mortgage. It was a rental, needed work. The main floor was rented, suite was empty. Had to screen renters. Rented out the suite to a couple with a little girl. He came and helped put flooring down, new counter top in and painted. They moved in before us. We had to wait a month for the upstairs tenant to move out.
Rented a bedroom to a fellow that was going to tech school. I did some painting for people, worked part time as a doorman at a theatre, got my chauffeur’s licence. We got by.
Interesting times. Our boarder was a guy that had gone to the same school as I had. On any given weekend you never knew what female friend was going to walk out of his bedroom. Wasn't the best looking guy, but my wife and our other friends wives said Keith really made them think he only talking to them individually.He would babysit for us if we asked.

1975 we thought about getting a larger house, one where everyone didn’t congregate at the bathroom at the end of the hall in the morning. So we looked for a 3 or 4 level split. Wanted to come down to the kitchen in the morning, but not a 2 story.
Housing market really started to jump after 1973. Fall of 75 we started to watch the newspapers for a private sale. January 28th 1976 my wife’s birthday we looked at our present house. Fellow was transferred here from Regina in June 75. Couldn’t find a place to rent, was having a house built on the Crescent. Our old house had risen in value dramatically.
I talked to our Bank manager at the Bank of Nova Scotia who had the mortgage he said find a place and we will lend you bridging money I said thanks.
We listed our place for 45,000.00. I called Ken the owner of this house that we would buy theirs. He said he had an offer of 54,500.00. They had paid 47,500.00. But he would let us have it, because we were the first people to look at it. Could he stop by and get a cheque for 700.00 at the end of the week. To purchase his house, we assumed his mortgage so we didn’t have to scramble. Not a bad profit 1,000.00 per month.
Our house sold in about two weeks. Told our Bank Manager what we had done, and was getting a down payment of 13,000.00 from the purchaser. He said I don’t know if we can do that.
In our other city I dealt with the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. I called a branch near us and explained my predicament. Got an appointment. Went in and talked to her. She said I know you don’t have money but you do. Yes we got the loan. Went back to the old Bank, sat in the Manager’s office and listened to him discuss a golfing holiday in the winter. He apologized for having a business discussion. I replied that overhearing golfing vacations didn’t seem like business to me. In hind site I MIGHT have forgiven him if he was talking about hunting or fishing.
I said I am here to pay all of our existing loans and closing the account. He said you can’t do that, I said I have a certified cheque to cover every thing. Felt vindicated!
Received the money paid the Runge’s previous owners cash , assumed their mortgage . Our boy’s and theirs went to the same public school down the street.
We did get caught for a short while when our interest rated hit 21.5%, that hurt. Paid off the house in January 1991. If my Mother had lived 2 months longer, she would have been very happy to know that.
 
Last edited:
Auto Transport Service
Back
Top