If you had a lot of money would you spend a million dollars on a home ?

I've seen many beautiful homes in my day, both in pictures, and in person, and not all, but many look unlived in, sterile, cold, and boring, and in fact, a good number of them look cheap and some even look gaudy.

I also find that a majority of large homes today all look the same, hence the term McMansions, in that they lack character and/or any uniqueness about them.

Myself, I gravitate towards a quaint home, where all is finished, all is warm and cozy, where when opens the front door, it feels like a home. I like a home to feel inviting, with a heavenly aroma of mouthwatering delight wafting in the air, where a few coats and hats can be seen hanging from hooks off to the side, and the rooms embrace you, not dwarf and drown you.

I like to hear the laughs and cheers of little voices, and see babies playing and crawling, I like a kitchen table that awaits it's next round of servings and conversation, where a coffee pot sits atop the stove waiting to be poured, and where love awaits. A welcome love where people feel they belong and where guests are always well received.

To me, that is a home.

No thanks to any fancy-schmancy for me, and definitely no thanks to outsiders such as butlers, chauffeurs, house maids, cleaning staff, and grounds keepers/gardeners.
I totally agree with @Aunt Marg.
The thought of having maids or cleaning staff touching my treasures around my home gives me the willies.
I want the fun of dabbling in my yard not a grounds keeper.
I can't imagine what I would do with myself floating around in such a big house.
 

My parents bought the house that I grew up in for $3,500 back in 1933. A couple of years ago I saw an ad for it for $490,000. Mom sold it in the 60s, but I don't know what she got for it.
 
I totally agree with @Aunt Marg.
The thought of having maids or cleaning staff touching my treasures around my home gives me the willies.
I want the fun of dabbling in my yard not a grounds keeper.
I can't imagine what I would do with myself floating around in such a big house.
Gives me the willies, too, Ruth! :)

And yes, without a yard and garden to be able to escape to, life wouldn't be the same for me.

ROFLMAO! "Floating around", I couldn't have said it better!

There's a story I read about J. Paul Getty, and how he would stroll the vast hallways of Sutton Place, a grand mansion in Surrey (UK).

No thanks to that for me.
 
Just to show how expensive property is here ... would you pay £1 million for this small 4 bed terrace house in London, which doesn't even have any parking or drive?... and the garden is only 25 feet.. ?..and is situated in a less than salubrious part of the city ?

https://www.rightmove.co.uk/properties/96015338#/
What does "terraced" mean? I've wondered that since hearing Herman's Hermits singing about "a terraced house" in No Milk Today.
 
Just to show how expensive property is here ... would you pay £1 million for this small 4 bed terrace house in London, which doesn't even have any parking or drive?... and the garden is only 25 feet.. ?..and is situated in a less than salubrious part of the city ?

https://www.rightmove.co.uk/properties/96015338#/
Here, a million doesn't get you much yard space in the city either. Real estate is high.
 
2 years ago we bought our project house, abandoned 1000SQFT with unfinished 2 car garage for $6500.
Lots of sweat equity and about $4000 more and the garage is finished, have water, sewer, power and windows
Camper to be moved onsite in the next couple weeks...
If we had an unlimited budget, I still doubt we would have a million dollar house...
 
A million is the going rate for a decent house here in Toronto, and other large cities such as Vancouver.

These days, a million is not a lot of money .. depending on where you live.
We're not far off from that here in Calif, too. My parents paid $15,500 for their 4br, 2ba house in 1965, It's about 30 miles from here but in the same county, and it's assessed at $400K now.

If I *could* pay a million $$ for a house, I wouldn't. And if that was the median rate, I'd keep renting. My dream home is a small 2br cabin-like home in the hills. Yeah, it wouldn't be a "house", it would be home.
 
This is my daughters' property in southern Spain.... valued at 400,000 euros.. for that there's 5 acres of land, a business, a one bed one bath casita, and a 3 bed finca... ..several outhouses..

the same property here if it was available would cost around 5 million

Donnas-ranch-HD.jpg
 
As many people have pointed out the houses in California are often more than a million dollars. So even if we were to upgrade to a million dollar house it wouldn't be that much larger or in that much better of an area.

If I did have a lot of money I would consider purchasing a home for more than a million dollars, but some of the places I'd want to buy are multiple million of dollars each.

We love where we live now and I doubt that we'll be moving anytime in the next 10 to 15 years unless our son and his wife choose to move elsewhere. Even then we might choose to stay here.
 
Not for me either, too big a house probably won't feel like a home.

Can I chuck in some more thoughts here about money, instead of starting a new thread(?)

They say "Money makes the world go around", (I'd guess most would agree with that statement).

You could go further and asserts "money rules", or something like that, but does money rule our own lives?

I hope money doesn't rule my life, but I don't want to be without enough either. :) .
 


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