Brit Reacts to What A $1 Million Dollar House Looks like Across America!

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What A $1 Million Dollar House Looks like Across America Reaction!

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Three rules in buying property: location, location, location.

revgurley
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The confusion on your face when you saw the "luxury home in Los Angeles" is perfectly normal. You're not crazy. They're crazy.

TrainingDummiesYT
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11:43
"This Is Just A Warehouse Vibe"

Well, Lewis, that's essentially what loft apartments are: Warehouses that have been converted into living spaces

karlsmith
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lmao. The look of utter horror and disbelief at 2:49 had me busting out laughing, i think i hurt myself lol.

ChrissyCrimson
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That house in Boston with the four fireplaces used to have walls separating them. It's an older home and rooms were much smaller in the past, partly because they were easier to heat. (Fireplaces are not efficient at heating) Sometime before the house was listed for sale, the walls were removed so that there was more space. The fireplaces were likely kept, either because they were architectural features, because they were too difficult to remove, or both. Plus, the narrator said it was a historic home, so that might be another reason the fireplaces were still there.
Also, that room with the tiny door is an access door to an attic space. Access doors like that aren't required to be full sized.

leannsmarie
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I live in Miami, so please listen up when I tell you this... when the home is an apartment (condo), what they are not telling you is that in addition to the yearly property taxes, you will also have very hefty condominium association fees that pay for all of the common areas and amenities, and the monthly condo fees can easily be as much as or more than your monthly mortgage payment for the apartment itself, so figure on doubling the money the listing tells you. This will apply to condos no matter what city it is in.

MoonlightSonata
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Lewis, Houston gets to 110* f in the summer. The humidity is around 90%. Stifling.

donaldinnewmexico
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San Diego you get 1500sqft 3bedroom, 2 bath condo! My building has 1 for sale now. 3 miles from ocean. . BTW Phoenix and Vegas are like living on the surface of the sun half the year. Miserable!!!

mikegottes
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A million doesn't get you as far as it once did.

jack-of-all-trades
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That little door in the Houston home is an access door to that part of the attic

jamescostabile
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Las Vegas weather is so hot like Arizona. In some communities like Las Vegas you have to pay a lot of HOA. Home Owners Association fee of more than $500.00 to $750.00 per month.

EmelyHale-ug
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In vermont it's not the bears it's the snow the freezing weather

usmcthmeu
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You can get a very nice house in the midwest for 200k especially if you live over 50 miles from a large city.

briankirchhoefer
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I lived in Indianapolis for 47 years. You can definitely get more house for the money in Indy. The city is pretty nice and lots to do with pro sports teams, Indy 500 and Brickyard races, excellent zoo, boating on Geist or Morse reservoirs and the best Children's Museum in the country. Plus, it's not far from Chicago, Detroit, Cincinnati and Louisville. We called it "Nap Town" and the city is definitely slept on. If you are thinking of moving there, look at the suburbs, north, south, east and west sides all have nice areas. North is definitely the most expensive with Geist, Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville or Zionsville.

Out-Of-Service
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Be careful about any condominium (apartments in the USA are almost always rental units ... if you own the unit, it's generally called a condo) because in addition to the purchase price and annual taxes there is also a monthly fee which can easily run $1000+ per month on a $1M property.

changeworkssystem
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Hi from Los Angeles 🙋‍♀️
I'm in a suburb in Southeast Los Angeles on the Orange County border. My house is 3 bedrooms/2 bathrooms 1700 square feet on one level. It's located in a typical middle class neighbourhood. Definitely no mansion but worth 1.5 million. The 2 bedroom/1.5 bath! 1280 sq ft, house next door to me sold last month for $900750!

nocturna
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With condos, there is usually a monthly HOA fee that can be quite pricey on top of property tax! Some houses also have HOA fees. I always have a bench at the foot of my bed to toss the comforter on and it's also a step up for my dogs to join me! 😁. I've never had a sofa at the foot of my bed. I guess if there was a TV or fireplace facing it, that would make sense.

spurmarks
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Both Phoenix and Las Vegas are desert communities, so yes, the summers are screaming HOT -- but there's very little humidity, so it doesn't FEEL as hot ... and you do get used to it. The best part of living in the desert is that from October thru May, the weather can be absolutely spectacular, which is why so many retirees come here to escape the cold and snow of so much of the country. Also -- NO BUGS ... in our 8+ years living in the desert, I've never seen a mosquito ... and even flies are few. One other thing: in American English, "homely" generally describes an unattractive person ... "homey" is that feeling the perfect place to live provides.

changeworkssystem
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The house in Boston with all the fireplaces is probably over a hundred to 150 years old it has all the fireplaces in it because it was built before electricity so there was no heat so they would have fireplaces in each room to heat the house sometimes there would be two fireplaces in a room if the room was big enough. And ask for houses that you want to get enough house for the money Tennessee is the place to come

molliew
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Arizona is gorgeous, and you can get bang for your buck. But on top of air con, you'll need sun screen and moisturizer. I spent a week there once, and no lie, I had "rug burns" on my skin from sliding into the bed. They were soft sheets! But my skin was SO dry, even staying hydrated, which helps, isn't enough. Slather the lotion on THICK.

revgurley