The benefits of owning one home are many. You really may only need just one to achieve your personal financial, wealth-building, and peace-of-mind goals.

Our mission is to help others learn the benefits of owning assets. And we believe that homeownership is the best place to start. But why? Beyond the American Dream and feel-good factor, why is it such a big deal?

If we dig down to the real, core reason – the benefits of owning just one home is rooted in how the laws of property rights and monetary system are set up. It’s how this society that we live in operates. If we felt there were a better way to achieve prosperity, well-being, and overall peace of mind, we’d be writing about that instead. 

But this is it.

In this article, we explore lots of benefits of long-term homeownership. But we cannot possibly cover everything. Everyone’s situation is different, and we understand that. There is no end-all-be-all answer for every single person, and there’s no way to include all factors in just one post. But we’ll do our best. 

It’s also important to keep in mind what all these numbers, laws, monetary system ruleset, making money, investing, and everything really mean –

That we are, in the end, working towards happiness, stability, and peace of mind. The former are tools to get there.

And while high interest rates lately might make homeownership seem completely unattainable lately, stay positive! History shows that in times of high inflation, housing values can still increase, among other things.

Property Rights

Property Rights, as defined well by Wikipedia, is a theoretical, socially-enforced construct in economics determining how a resource or economic good gets used. In layman’s terms – it means that in our society, things like land and real estate are first really owned and controlled by the government and then the laws and rules that we live by determine how it will be used to benefit the country and society.

By taking “ownership” of a home and continuing to take care of it, you also get to live there and experience the long-term benefits it provides. But it’s essential to be aware of the underlying system it exists in. As Robert Kiyosaki put it well in his famous book  Rich Dad Poor Dad –

Stop paying your property taxes and you’ll find out who actually owns your house.

While that’s a different way to see it, the concept of property rights goes back hundreds of years, dating back to 16th-century Europe. It has since become the foundation for many countries throughout the world in different forms. It’s arguably a very stable way to manage societies, countries, and billions of people on earth (even though it does create vast inequality, among other things). The United States is considered one of the most stable places, if not the most stable country, because property rights are such an important part of society. It’s a big reason why many investors from all over the world want their money here.

The Realities of Home Owning

While there are massive benefits to owning a home long-term, make no mistake that there can be some downsides. While researching data for this article, many of the top search results were actually why not to own. Many argue that owning is actually a liability, not an asset. 

The Bills You’ll Pay

Homeownership can be expensive. Every once in a while you’re spending thousands in repairs, making endless trips to Home Depot, and it feels like the bills never stop coming. Here is a quick list that’s typical in owning any home – 

  • Mortgage
  • Private Mortgage Insurance [PMI] – If you put down less than 20%
  • Property Taxes
  • Property Insurance
  • HOA fees 
  • Utility Bills
  • Maintenance – Thousands for roofs, HVAC, water heaters, appliances, renovations, upgrades, landscaping, carpet/flooring.
  • Surprises – Tornadoes, hurricanes, fires, floods, hurricanes, pipes bursting, hail, rotted sewer pipes, etc. You’re on the hook for these with a deductible even if insurance covers most of it.
A circular graphic showing the range of all the costs of home ownership

Yes, it’s true these add up, and sometimes to quite a lot. But it all depends, and over time you usually come out way ahead, even with the above. You just have to buy right, account for these items, and stay within your personal budget, among other things.

Economic Cycles & Bubbles

Many people also have a version of PTSD from the Great Recession/2008 crisis, where home values plummeted in some areas (or at least did not increase in value for a few years). Some regions have not even recovered to where they were in 05/06. But that is because we were in an all-out asset bubble (relative to underlying fundamentals), one that usually comes once a century. Then there are regular supply and demand factors, population growth and decline, and other external factors that can affect expenses or home value.

I can hear you now – Wait a minute, this doesn’t look like any reason to want to buy at all! I encourage you not to give up yet. Read on, but with respect to the realities above.

Take a look at the Housing Price Index below. You can see that even with the latest crash, the overall trendline is clearly up over time if you’re holding for long periods.

As a side-note – we did a large writeup on Ray Dalio’s excellent video on how the economic machine and cycles work, which help explain the ’08 crash as well. You can check that out here. It helps explain the graph above and how they got the economy back on track, with the goal of keeping general inflation rising.

The Numbers Don’t Lie

Even with all the expenses, horror stories, economic cycles, and crashes (which are temporary), the financial benefits of owning and hanging on to one home cannot be ignored. 

Inflation and Appreciation

These two go hand-in-hand, because inflation (defined as a general increase in prices and fall in the purchasing value of money) exists as part of our monetary system. All else being equal, they can only go up over time if the same system is to stay in place. This study shows that:

“Over the complete history (1891 – 2017), housing prices have increased by 3.2% per year and 0.7% after inflation.”

If you forget supply and demand, population growth, or any other factors affecting home prices, this shows that the simple devaluation of our currency (money printing) pushes real asset prices up. And home prices generally follow this long-term trend. When you have more of something in circulation (the U.S. Dollar) to buy the same amount of goods, prices go up. 

A graphic with an upward moving bar graph that states that housing prices have increased by 3.2% per year.

Short-term trends are another story. In the last ten years we’ve seen prices crash in areas, and then gain 15-20 percent in a year to catch up after the economy was back on track. This is why we are focused on long-term holding of real estate and assets in general. The gains even out over time and are more in sync with the general trends. This is also the way the system was designed – to keep the game going.

For reference also – national home prices increased 4.4% from January 2018 to January 2019 and year-to-date 2019 looks similar. But keep in mind that real estate markets are local and segmented, with each being different and having their own mini-economies.

Net Worth of Renters vs. Homeowners

At the end of 2016, the Federal Reserve released a study called the Survey of Consumer Finances which shows a staggering figure –

The average net worth of homeowners in the U.S. is 44.5X higher than renters (4,450%!).

A chart of net worth of families comparing those who rent and those who own a home. It shows owners having a significantly higher net worth, showing the benefits of owning one home.

Net worth is defined as the total measure of personal wealth, which is all assets minus all liabilities. And in the report, most of this wealth did come from the benefit of owning a home long-term as a primary residence. The inequality is significantly higher today (end of 2019) since it’s been three years of steady home price gains. (That study was from 2016, but it’s the most recent one we have.)

You can see that the average homeowner has an average net worth of $231,400, while renters have $5,200. To put this in perspective, the average retiree’s (65+) net worth is $229,425, according to the same survey above. Millennials (ages 23-38 in 2019) have an average net worth of about $8,000, but our generation hasn’t had the decades to save or own a home long-term yet.

A graphic comparing the net worth of homeowners vs renters. It shows that homeowners have a 44.5X higher net worth than renters.

The Wealthy Own It

A graphic with rounded edges and a dark background that reads 90% of wealthy people get that way through real estate ownership.

The rules haven’t changed. Decades of studies, surveys and quotes from the wealthy show that anywhere from 70-90%+ of them own real estate. And many got there by solely by owning real estate. The advice to hold property spans from the empire-builders of the ’30s to the surveys of today

A graphic with a red-orange background and some housing graphics that reads "Ninety Percent of All Millionaires Become So Through Owning Real Estate." by Andrew Carnegie.

The Power of Compound Interest

So why even mention the wealthy, when many of us are just trying to get out of credit card and student loan debt? When many are just working to pay the bills and save a little bit after expenses?

Because at today’s prices and real inflation rates, there’s a good chance that owning property will get you there automatically. If we’re just comparing renting long-term vs. homeowning and keeping all else equal, it makes a big difference.

Here are some quick figures that show buying a home today at different prices, and running compound interest at 3% (average inflation) for 30 years:

  • $150,000 -> $364,089
  • $200,000 -> $485,452
  • $250,000 -> $606,816
  • $300,000 -> $728,179
  • $350,000 -> $849.542
  • $400,000 -> $970,905
  • $411,987 -> $1,000,000
  • Renting: $0 -> $0

Automatic Millionaire

Why $411,987? Because if you buy a house today at that price and pay it off over the next 30 years, with inflation running at the 3% rate, you will have a $1,000,000 asset, owned free and clear. The purchasing power of your dollars will indeed be less in 30 years. But owning and holding just this one thing will allow you to not only keep up with the dollar devaluation/loss of purchasing power but to thrive and prosper with it. You’ll be an official millionaire, assuming no other debts or assets. We’ll explore why further below as well. 

A graphic with a house picture on the left, with written words Wealth Builds Over Time below it, at an average of 3% per year.

And if you spend the same for housing each month, what is your net worth increase if you rent instead of buy over And if you spend the same for housing each month, what is your net worth increase if you rent instead of buy over that same period? Zero.

A graphic with a blue background and rounded edges that reads "$0 net worth increase spending the same amount of money for rent instead of buying over 30 years."

You can play with this calculator to plug in different scenarios to see for yourself. Plug in your own home starting value, move the slider for inflation, and adjust the mortgage timeframe (multiply years by 12 since it’s in months) –

Hanging onto assets like this is also really powerful. Because at the end of those thirty years, you may be approaching or already in retirement, and now you have lots of options.

You can live there virtually for free (aside from yearly property tax + maintenance & utilities). Or you could rent it out for a nice monthly profit that will most likely cover all of your living expenses. Either way, you have options for a comfortable retirement. Plus, you can pass it along to your heirs later on as well. 

Lock-In Your Living Costs

By buying and keeping the house, you lock in the cost of the mortgage for the life of that loan. That means your monthly payment will never go up. Everything else (like property taxes, maintenance, insurance, and utility bills) goes up in cost around you at around the same rate as inflation.  But your mortgage amount per month stays the same over time. If you’re renting, though, landlords are undoubtedly eager to raise those rents at any chance they get, so there’s no escape from higher costs.

Taking real inflation numbers from both fifteen and thirty years ago, we can see it in action. If each mortgage started back in 2004 (fifteen years ago) or 1989 (thirty years ago) at $1,000, you can see what the equivalent rent would be these days—again, just keeping up with inflation.

Buying a home fifteen years ago with the mortgage of $1,000, you’re still paying $1,000 today, effectively still owning the home in 2004 dollars. But everyone else renting is paying $1,338.15 in today’s dollars for the exact same thing.

A screenshot of text that reads $1,000 in 2004 would be worth $1,338.15 in 2019 adjusted for inflation.

Running the numbers for thirty years, you can see you’re paying about half of rent for the same home. $1,000 is equal to $2,038.52 in today’s devaluated dollars. This also means that the U.S. Dollar has depreciated over 50% in thirty years.

A screenshot of text that reads $1,000 in 1989 would be worth $2,038.15 in 2019 adjusted for inflation.
Courtesy of https://cpiinflationcalculator.com/

Everyone else would be paying that $2,038.52 if they started or renewed a lease today. But if you owned a house and kept it long-term, the mortgage portion of your cost remains the exact same at $1,000, in the higher-valued dollars from decades prior.

Inflation really is the silent killer in terms of how this economic system is set up. That’s why we put so much emphasis on the importance of owning assets over the long haul to keep up with it.

Keep The Faith

The $411,987 number above (to get you to $1M) might seem high in some areas of the country. But it’s actually lower than many metro average home price values. And at today’s low interest rates and with a lower down payment (3.5-10%), the payments can be quite reasonable. (And still cheaper than renting.)

If you have a good job, have a dual-income (married/partner), or have your personal debt-to-income ratios in order, you can probably make it happen. And no one says you have to spend that much. The median home price in America is about $240,000, and that will still approach $600,000 at regular inflation rates after thirty years. 

If you can’t buy right now – do not lose faith. Dive into the great resources available, whether it be here, on other websites, in books, or courses. Take pride in doing what it takes to be able to buy a home. It will take hard work and sacrifice. We all had to do it, and it’s worth it.

Buying and Selling

The #1 Buying Rule

This might be a good time to mention the number one rule of buying a home that I know of, after buying and selling homes and investing for over a decade now. And that is –

Make sure your total expenses to own are 10% less than what that same home would rent out for.

Put the opposite way:

Make sure the same home would rent out for 10% higher per month than all your costs to own it.

Say a home would cost you $1,500 per month in total to own (including all expenses listed above). Make sure it could rent for at least $1,650 per month ($1,500 x 1.1 or 110%). Include the entire list of expenses above for your costs, not just your mortgage. The extra 10% is to account for a general cushion and small profit. It will cover things like maintenance/replacement items, vacancy, utilities, trash, sewer, and any surprises. 

A graphic with a light grey background that reads "#1 Buying Rule - Make sure your home rents out for 10% more per month than it costs you to own."

The goal is to own the property for slightly less per month or per year vs. what it rents out for. In this way, you will stay solvent and always cover your ownership costs (and hopefully pocket a little profit as well). If you have to move for things like a new job, a sick family member out of state, or something else, this allows you to keep the home and rent it out, without worrying about covering the costs of owning. Understandably, there are many scenarios to want to sell and let go of a home. But this rule at least gives you the option to keep it long-term.

If you’re already using a site like Zillow.com, they have a helpful built-in calculator that gets you most of the way there on every single home details page. But you have to add in the rest of the costs they don’t automatically include.

[elementor-template id=”1240″]

It’s Expensive to Sell

As of right now, Realtors & the MLS still control most of the market for buying and selling homes. And in fact, they are the second biggest lobbyist in D.C. (They spent more than $64M in 2016 alone to hang on to their business.) 

What does this mean for you? Big venture capital money and startups are trying to bring down transaction/selling costs. But for now, and the near future, it will cost you 5-7% of your home’s value to sell it. This is because the seller usually pays the commission to both the buyer’s and your (seller’s) agent. Add in title fees, seller concessions, and lots of other costs, and it really adds up. It’s painful to watch all that money fly out the window, trust me!

Using the national median home price at the end of 2018 of $240,000, that will cost you $14,400 at a 6% full agent commission, not including the rest of the fees. At a 6% fee, here is what you’ll pay in higher price ranges:

  • $300,000 -> $18,000
  • $400,000 -> $24,000
  • $500,000 -> $30,000
  • $600,000 -> $36,000
  • $700,000 -> $42,000

You get the idea, but those higher numbers are what most people make in a year! I’ve got nothing against real estate agents that are helpful and provide value. But that’s serious money that you can keep by not selling.

A graph showing increments of $100,000, and how much realtors take in commission at each level. It adds up!

Leaving Money On the Table By Selling Often

Research shows that the average homeowner keeps a home for just over eight years. This means that most will sell their house at least three times over thirty years (typical mortgage length). Not only will you be paying roughly that 6% commission each time, but you also have to restart on a whole new mortgage

A graphic with dark grey background that reads "The average time most people stay in the home same: 8 years"

This is key because when you run amortization on a mortgage, you’re paying mostly interest for the first ten years or so. When you run the actual figures, after eight years, you’ve only paid down 16.6% of your loan balance. The rest went to interest payments, which is also just pure profit to the bank or the owner of your loan.

Take the median house of $240,000 on a 30-year loan with 20% down ($48,000) at 4%. After eight years, your loan balance is still about $160,000 on an original mortgage loan of $192,000. You’ve only paid it down $32,000, and now you have to start over. Banks know this, and most, if not all, mortgage contracts do not allow you to transfer any loans to new properties. This allows them to make lots of profit off the interest you’re paying while keeping the loan balances high and new loans rolling in.

We want the money in your pocket, not theirs. And you can do this by simply keeping the same loan and home, ideally forever.

A screenshot of an amortization table showing a monthly payment of $916.64 with a line and bar graph, indicating your principal and interest over a 30 year period.
Courtesy of CalculateStuff.com | Amortization of a $240,000 Home Bought with 20% Down
A graphic with green background and a cartoon drawing of a house with a % sign in the middle of it. On the right side it shows a bar graph indicating what percent of the loan balance remains after a certain amount of years.

Tax Benefits of Owning One Home

I won’t go into a ton of detail on this, as there is a lot online already. But the tax benefits are substantial. Whether you’re keeping or selling a home, there are a few things to note – 

Deductions

Mortgage interest can be deducted from your taxes, specifically through IRS Publication 936. This can often be a significant deduction to offset your income, one you don’t get from renting. You can also deduct maintenance expenses and some other things. (It’s good to research the tax law changes for the current year as well.)

Capital Gains Tax Waived

If you do need to sell your home, you can pocket the gains if you meet these IRS rules. –

If you have a capital gain from the sale of your main home, you may qualify to exclude up to $250,000 of that gain from your income, or up to $500,000 of that gain if you file a joint return with your spouse. Publication 523, Selling Your Home provides rules and worksheets. Topic No. 409 covers general capital gain and loss information.

Don’t Sell, Treat Your Home Like a Bank Account Instead

HELOCs and Cash-Out Refinance

When you keep a place long-term, in addition to all those benefits above, you can cash out periodically as the value goes up over time. You may have heard of HELOCs (home equity line of credit), or cash-out refinance options (you can get a new mortgage and “cash out” the equity that you’ve built in your home). These options allow you to use that money for something else, but you keep your home instead of having to sell it.

HELOCs operate like a regular loan that uses your equity built up in your house as collateral.

A graphic with a green background and a bar graph showing the amount of equity gained over the years using 4% interest.

Cash-out refi’s put you into a new mortgage, adjusting your new monthly payments to represent the loan as if you just bought a new house at a higher value, and then you pocket that extra money. There are some excellent calculators online that allow you to run different scenarios.

Don’t Blow It

It should be noted that it’s best only to use these options to buy other assets that also generally go up in value over time. But it’s understandable if you need the cash for emergencies or other life situations. What you absolutely should not do is take this gained money and blow it on depreciating liabilities, like fancy cars, toys, or vacations that you cannot afford.

Many households were crushed just before the ’08 crisis, and hard lessons were learned. When the market turned south, it left many people with too much debt and not enough income. And it destroyed people’s net worth due to the houses dropping in value. When you take on new debt and the value of those items goes down, that money is gone. But the debt remains. This is a core reason why people go bankrupt and lose everything.

But when done responsibly, these options allow for strategic use of the cash and gains you’ve built up, all while keeping the original asset (house), riding through the hard times, and continuing to benefit from that into the future.

Buying Homes vs. Other Assets (Stock Market)

While it’s true that asset gains have historically been higher in some other asset classes, like the stock market (12% on average, 7% inflation-adjusted), there’s one critical piece to that – 

When buying a home, you can buy 5-10 times more of that asset vs. other assets.

Wait, what? With stocks, for instance, if you want to buy one share of Apple at $250, you need $250 of cash. If you put down 20% on a house, you are buying five times (1 divided by .2, or 500%) more of an asset. This is due to leverage, or taking out a loan/mortgage to buy it. Some call this “good debt.”

A graphic with a light grey background that reads "You can buy a much bigger asset with the same money". At the bottom it compares buying a house with $20,000 down to stocks, bond, antiques, gold & silver, land, and most importantly a home with 20% down payment. This shows that you can buy 500% more of an asset by using a loan.

If you’ve saved $20,000 for a down payment on a house and you put down 20% on the mortgage – you can buy a $100,000 home. That’s 5X or 500% of the money you have available. If you use the $20,000 to purchase stock, you own $20,000 of Apple (1X or 100%).

Now if you put down less, this time 10%, with $20,000 saved up, you’re buying a $200,000 house (or 10X the asset). If home prices increase at the 3% rate above, this also means:

Putting 20% Down – Example

Putting 20% down means your ROI (Return on Investment) is 5X the 3% gain, or 15%. You put down $20,000, but if $100,000 goes up 3% per year, that’s a $3,000 increase. The ROI calculation then is:

$3,000 gain / $20,000 down payment = 15% Return on Investment.

If buying responsibly, and sticking to the #1 buying rule above, one can argue that putting less down means a higher ROI. (This will only work if prices rise, and hurts you proportionally badly if prices end up going south in the short term. So it’s something to be careful with.)

Putting 10% Down – Example

With 10% down we can use this $20,000 to buy  a $200,000 home. If it goes up 3% per year, that’s a hefty $6,000 increase. The ROI calculation then is:

$6,000 gain / $20,000 down payment = 30% Return on Investment.

And that’s just the first year. The numbers are real, and the gains are real. This is the power of real estate and using leverage (loans) responsibly to supercharge your net worth over time. The system is designed this way, and this is why it’s so crucial in the long run.

A graphic showing how owning a home can amplify your gains vs things like the stock market. It shows different variations of investing $20,000 in different assets, and what your different gains are per year.

Everyone’s situation is different and these variables can change over time. But we believe this is a big reason why at least starting out by owning and keeping one house is so powerful.

Real-World Examples – Decades of Gains

We just used 3% inflation per year above for calculations, when in fact in the gains in most areas have been much higher. If you throw in things like population growth, supply and demand, renovations, and other things – it can really boost the values over time.

When you buy a house on a foundation that is attached to a piece of land, you own a scarce asset. No more of this exact thing will be produced on this piece of land in this location. Therefore, over time, most property values increase faster than just the regular 3% inflation rate. 

It’s hard to find exact figures from 30 years ago, but let’s go back in time and take a look at a few random houses in different cities around the country. We checked each house on the actual property tax assessor’s website for recorded sales:

4 Bedroom Home Outside of Orlando, FL:

A picture of a dark brown house with an old grey room in Orlando, FL.
4 Bedroom Home in Orlando, FL | Courtesy of Zillow.com

1982 (37 years ago) sold for: $39,000
Recently sold for: $165,000
Total gain: $126,000
Yearly compounded appreciation rate on total home value: 3.98%
Compounded rate of return assuming 20% down payment of $7,800 on a total 37 year gain of $126,000: 7.8%

3 Bedroom Home in Woodland Hills, CA (LA area):

A picture of a modestly sized house with a tan roof and tan exterior paint with the lights on inside, and sitting on the side of a hill in Los Angeles, CA.
3 Bedroom Home in the Los Angeles, CA area | Courtesy of Zillow.com

1985 (34 years ago) sold for: $212,500
Recently sold for: $867,000
Total gain: $654,500
Yearly compounded appreciation rate on total home value: 4.8%
Compounded rate of return assuming 20% down payment of $42,500 on a total 34 year gain of $732,500: 9.54%

*This was an expensive house back in 1985, and it’s still an expensive house now. But this shows that if you can get into a higher-priced house at the right time, your gains can be pretty staggering through the years.

3 Bedroom Home Outside of Nashville, TN:

A picture of a small older house painted light grey, with a large tree in the front yard.
3 Bedroom Home Outside of Nashville, TN | Courtesy of Zillow.com

1994 (25 years ago) sold for: $63,239
Recently sold for: $348,000
Total gain: $284,761
Yearly compounded appreciation rate on total home value: 7%
Compounded rate of return assuming 20% down payment of $12,648 on a total 25 year gain of $284,761: 13.27%

3 Bedroom Home in Charleston, SC:

A picture of a two-story red brick home with a one-car garage and trees surrounding it.
3 Bedroom Home Outside of Charleston, SC | Courtesy of Zillow.com

1975 (44 years ago) sold for: $38,637
Recently sold for: $437,000
Total gain: $398,363
Yearly compounded appreciation rate on total home value: 5.67%
Compounded rate of return assuming 20% down payment of $7,727 on a total 44 year gain of $398,363: 9.6%

These show a few examples among the 138 million homes built in America. And there will be variables such as condition of the property, local economies, and neighborhood desirability, among other things. But I do believe it shows the value of holding a house long-term and riding the wave.

Final Thoughts & Summary

With the combination of buying right, using a mortgage (to buy a larger asset, relative to other options), and hanging on to property through at least one or two economic cycles (ideally forever), among other things, you can see how your wealth builds steadily and surely.

What we really just tried to do is show what the benefits are, specifically, of just taking the money you would use for rent anyway and buying instead. And this is with the home value only keeping up with historical inflation, whereas it actually often increases more.

There are pros and cons to everything. And saving up for the down payment and keeping the house for the long-haul will take some sacrifice, work, and planning. But when you consider the opportunity cost of not buying or owning large assets, that is the real and silent cost that will be an ever-stronger headwind.

There is a lot more to all of this. And we respect that everyone is in different stages of life, with different goals and in different situations. This is also a long-term game, requiring planning for ten, twenty, or thirty years out. But in general, we do believe in homeownership and wanted to show how owning just one home in your lifetime can reap incredible benefits, financially and otherwise.

Want to share your own story with others about the struggles or benefits in your own journey on the path to ownership? We would love to hear from you! The more we can help each other in this endeavor, the more we can all prosper.

2024 Update – Net Zero Home Renovations

As part of my own desire to prove that you can combine the benefits of homeownership with sustainability – I spent my time working through the pandemic to do the company’s first two net-zero solar home renovations in Florida.

This project combined all the themes mentioned above in this article and sustainability to try to meet these exact goals. Trying to add efficiency and solar energy to a regular first rehab was extremely stressful, especially trying to stay within budget and under the area’s median home value, but there are no regrets!

Check out the article here (our first project) to see how we met these very goals talked about here, including the detailed investment metrics towards the end of it. We also wrote up the case study on the second project too.

Both were profitable projects, with the first one being sold due to a good market in FL, and now the second is a great netzero rental as well!

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