▲ | al_borland a day ago | |||||||
I saw this when I lived in the Chicagoland area. A co-worker was giving me the business for renting instead of buying something. The he let it slip that his property tax alone was $35k/year, almost 2x what I was paying in rent, and that didn’t even include the mortgage. | ||||||||
▲ | tomjakubowski a day ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Surely this must not have been a like-for-like comparison, unless your landlord is very charitable or somehow secured a much lower property tax rate than your coworker did (as is possible in California through various Prop 13 mechanisms). Have you looked up what the property tax bill is on your apartment? | ||||||||
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▲ | tptacek a day ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
That's an enormously high property tax bill for Chicagoland. I live in Oak Park, famously one of the highest-taxed areas in the county, in a relatively large house, and my taxes are not close to that (more than $10k less). I don't doubt you or your friend, but their situation was unique. | ||||||||
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