Articles and Advice
Starter home or forever home? Here's the thing — most buyers approach this question backward. They start by browsing listings and then try to figure out what they're actually looking for. But the starter-versus-forever decision really needs to come first, because it shapes everything: your budget, your search criteria, how you evaluate a compromise.
Both paths are legitimate. Neither is the "right" answer.
A starter home is a smaller, more affordable property that gets you into the market without maxing out your finances on day one. Condos, townhouses, modest single-family homes. The goal isn't perfection — it's equity. It's getting a foothold.
And honestly? There's real wisdom in that approach. If you're early in your career, if your household might look different in five years, or if you're in a market where a forever home simply isn't realistic right now, a starter home isn't a consolation prize. It's a strategy.
A forever home is the one you buy intending to stay in. More space, the right school district, the neighborhood you actually want. Features you've thought about for years. It usually costs more — sometimes significantly more — and it asks more of your monthly budget.
But here's what buyers sometimes underestimate: Every time you sell and buy again, you pay transaction costs. Closing fees, agent commissions, moving expenses. If you can afford to buy once and stay, that math might be worth running before you assume a starter home is the safer bet.
Before you schedule a single showing, sit with these:
The reality is that starter homes give you flexibility and lower financial exposure. But you'll almost certainly move again, and moving costs money. Time, too. Forever homes give you stability and the room to put down real roots, but they demand more capital upfront and leave less cushion if life takes a turn.
Neither is better. They're just different bets on where you are and where you're headed.
The phrase "forever home" is a little misleading, honestly. Life changes. Circumstances shift. So maybe the better question isn't whether a home will serve you forever — it's whether it will serve you well for the next chapter.
Buy with clear eyes. Know what you're optimizing for. And trust that a good decision made thoughtfully now will hold up, even if the future doesn't go exactly as planned.