Why You Should Build Your Own Home
An in-depth perspective into why so many people fail to reach their financial goals in our modern day. Any person can enhance their lifestyle by building his or her own house. This creates equity that is usually the difference between failing or achieving.
I remember back in 1970, working people with just one job could afford to buy a nice home and a car. That person could have a family and a few of the luxuries of life while still being able to have one parent stay home to raise the children. The average sized house cost around $25,000. An average sedan cost around $3,000. The average baby delivery, free of complications, cost around $500. Life was manageable with one average income. Minimum wage was $2.00 per hour.
Let’s dash ahead 36 years later to the modern day. Here we are in 2006 and the world is an incredible and wonderful place for certain. But amidst the financial successes of so many, remains a class of less fortunate people that is ever widening. Common people are playing the game of life using old-fashioned methods for managing money taught to them by their parents. In the industrial era, hard working people with integrity could get by with one income.
Now, in the information era, that same type of home now costs around $200,000. An average sedan now costs around $30,000, and a baby delivery, free of complications, costs around $8,000. The real kicker is that minimum wage has only risen to an average of $5.15 per hour.
So, the cost of homes has increased to around 900 percent it’s cost from 1970. The cost of a new car has increased to around 1,000 percent, and the cost of a baby delivery has increased to a staggering 1,500 percent. Minimum wage however has only risen by about 275 percent.
The ratio of income to expenses is no longer manageable with one income. Usually both individual’s work and children are raised in daycares or school. This isn’t anyone’s fault, but it is everyone’s problem and many people feel like failures for getting behind financially.
I believe that people should be able to do their own work to save labor costs where they can. We can’t build our own cars because of so much technology and they also need to be safe. We really shouldn’t perform our own medical operations either. We should probably leave that one to the professionals, but modern homes are expensive because of hired labor costs. We absolutely should be able to build our own homes. The quality and safety would be maintained because all homes have to be inspected several times before they are released to the homeowner regardless of who does the labor.
Ten years ago, I was a low-income wage earner. My wife and I really wanted to buy our own home, but we got turned down every place we went to ask for a loan because of our low income. It was then that I learned from my friend that homes have a high price tag only when contractors build them. He told me his story about building his own house by himself and saving almost two-thirds the cost of the home.
After following his advice, my wife and I were able to scrape enough money together to start the foundation and make the walls and roof. Every paycheck we would buy building materials and do our own work on the house. We reached the point where our home was far enough along to have sufficient value to get a construction loan to finish it.
In the end, all the materials for our home cost us only $60,000, yet the home appraised for $140,000.
We figure that in the long run over thirty years, the difference of financing a contractor built home, compared to only financing the materials at ten percent interest will save us around $240,000 in finance charges.
We have low monthly payments and we moved into our home with over fifty percent equity in it. That’s a point that takes most homeowners close to twenty years of mortgage payments to reach.
Building our own home has given us more financial options to help face an unfair world. We have been able to use the equity to start a business and get an education. It has turned our home into our biggest financial tool instead of our worst financial burden.
Now, after helping several people do the same thing we did, I realize that most of us only need a gentle push in the right direction to be really successful. Most of the time, we only need to know how to build our own homes and then it all falls into place. I love helping people reach their goals of building a nice home, especially when they otherwise had no chance of getting ahead in life.
Let’s dash ahead 36 years later to the modern day. Here we are in 2006 and the world is an incredible and wonderful place for certain. But amidst the financial successes of so many, remains a class of less fortunate people that is ever widening. Common people are playing the game of life using old-fashioned methods for managing money taught to them by their parents. In the industrial era, hard working people with integrity could get by with one income.
Now, in the information era, that same type of home now costs around $200,000. An average sedan now costs around $30,000, and a baby delivery, free of complications, costs around $8,000. The real kicker is that minimum wage has only risen to an average of $5.15 per hour.
So, the cost of homes has increased to around 900 percent it’s cost from 1970. The cost of a new car has increased to around 1,000 percent, and the cost of a baby delivery has increased to a staggering 1,500 percent. Minimum wage however has only risen by about 275 percent.
The ratio of income to expenses is no longer manageable with one income. Usually both individual’s work and children are raised in daycares or school. This isn’t anyone’s fault, but it is everyone’s problem and many people feel like failures for getting behind financially.
I believe that people should be able to do their own work to save labor costs where they can. We can’t build our own cars because of so much technology and they also need to be safe. We really shouldn’t perform our own medical operations either. We should probably leave that one to the professionals, but modern homes are expensive because of hired labor costs. We absolutely should be able to build our own homes. The quality and safety would be maintained because all homes have to be inspected several times before they are released to the homeowner regardless of who does the labor.
Ten years ago, I was a low-income wage earner. My wife and I really wanted to buy our own home, but we got turned down every place we went to ask for a loan because of our low income. It was then that I learned from my friend that homes have a high price tag only when contractors build them. He told me his story about building his own house by himself and saving almost two-thirds the cost of the home.
After following his advice, my wife and I were able to scrape enough money together to start the foundation and make the walls and roof. Every paycheck we would buy building materials and do our own work on the house. We reached the point where our home was far enough along to have sufficient value to get a construction loan to finish it.
In the end, all the materials for our home cost us only $60,000, yet the home appraised for $140,000.
We figure that in the long run over thirty years, the difference of financing a contractor built home, compared to only financing the materials at ten percent interest will save us around $240,000 in finance charges.
We have low monthly payments and we moved into our home with over fifty percent equity in it. That’s a point that takes most homeowners close to twenty years of mortgage payments to reach.
Building our own home has given us more financial options to help face an unfair world. We have been able to use the equity to start a business and get an education. It has turned our home into our biggest financial tool instead of our worst financial burden.
Now, after helping several people do the same thing we did, I realize that most of us only need a gentle push in the right direction to be really successful. Most of the time, we only need to know how to build our own homes and then it all falls into place. I love helping people reach their goals of building a nice home, especially when they otherwise had no chance of getting ahead in life.

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