Home Buyer Protection

What's So Great About Buying a House?

Charles Season 1 Episode 1

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0:00 | 47:56

What’s so great about buying a house? For a lot of people, the honest answer is: it feels terrifying. The price tag is huge, the process is confusing, and the fear of making a bad decision can keep buyers stuck on the sidelines for years. In this first episode of Home Buyer Protection, we strip away the jargon and break down the real reasons homeownership can be one of the most important financial decisions of your life — if you approach it with clarity, strategy, and the right team. 

We talk about the hidden cost of renting long-term, how equity really works, why leverage can be such a powerful wealth-building tool, and how homeownership can transform a monthly housing payment into something that builds value for you instead of your landlord. We also dig into the real financial mechanics buyers need to understand, including down payments, mortgage structure, appreciation, tax deductions, tax credits, and the long-term difference between paying for shelter and building an asset. 

But this episode is about more than just money. It is also about mindset. We unpack the emotional side of buying a home — the anxiety, the fear of responsibility, the worry about timing the market, and the pressure that can make smart people freeze. If you’ve ever thought, “What if I can’t afford it?” “What if I’m single?” “What if I buy at the wrong time?” or “What if I make a mistake I can’t undo?” — this episode is for you. We walk through those fears honestly and show how knowledge, preparation, and better questions can shrink them down to size. 

You’ll also hear why building the right team matters, why independent inspections and trustworthy professionals are so important, and why no buyer should feel like they have to figure all of this out alone. The goal of this episode is simple: to help you stop seeing home buying as one giant overwhelming leap and start seeing it as a series of understandable decisions you can make with confidence. 

If you’ve been renting, hesitating, second-guessing yourself, or waiting for the “perfect” time, this conversation will challenge the way you think about ownership, risk, and long-term security. The more you understand, the less fear controls the process. And the more informed you are, the better positioned you are to protect yourself, advocate for yourself, and make decisions that serve your future. 

Listen to Episode 1: What’s So Great About Buying a House? and start building the knowledge every buyer needs before making one of the biggest purchases of their life.

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So uh grab a coffee.

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Or a beer. I mean it's that kind of topic.

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Yeah, exactly. Grab a beer, pull up a chair. Because I want you, the listener, to just stop and think about the rent check you wrote this month.

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Oh, that's a painful thought for a lot of people.

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Right. But really do it. Now project that exact checkout over the course of thirty years.

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Factoring in inflation, of course.

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Of course. Factoring in a standard rate of inflation. That monthly check over thirty years is going to equal over a million dollars.

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Easily.

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And when all is said and done, when you've written all those checks, you will have absolutely nothing to show for it.

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Nothing.

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No asset, no equity, just, you know, a stack of old leases in a drawer somewhere.

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Which is a really tough pill to swallow.

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It is. So today we are just hanging out at happy hour. And we are about to unpack what is arguably the biggest, most intimidating, most not in your stomach purchase of your entire life.

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The absolute biggest.

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In this deep dive, we will discuss the financial mechanics of homeownership, the hidden tax benefits, the psychological shift from renting to owning, and the common fears that hold buyers back.

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And thankfully, we're going to do it by dropping all the stiff, impossible to read financial jargon.

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Yes, please.

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Because that stuff usually just makes people completely tune out.

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I know I tune out. Yes. As soon as someone says amortization, my eyes glaze over.

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Right. And dropping the jargon is really the only way to actually understand the gravity of this stuff. Because um, before anyone can even begin to figure out the absolute mountain of logistics.

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Inspections, the mortgages.

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Exactly, the closing costs, all the how of buying a house.

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Yeah.

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Before all that, we really need to sit down and figure out the why.

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The core motivation.

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Right. Because almost everyone who walks into this process arrives with a literal knot in their stomach.

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Oh, 100%.

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There are endless doubts. There's this overwhelming fear of, you know, making a wrong move.

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Just a constant loop of what ifs playing in your head.

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Aaron Powell Yeah. It's an incredibly emotional reality. I mean, you're dealing with hundreds of thousands of dollars.

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A 30-year commitment.

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A 30-year commitment. Right. And fundamentally, you're dealing with your physical shelter where you sleep.

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Right. It's not just a financial transaction, it's survival.

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Absolutely.

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So I really want to ask you, the listener, right now, where are you sitting as you listen to this?

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Good question.

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Are you in a rented apartment, looking around, paying rent every single month, and quietly wondering where all that money actually goes?

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Aaron Ross Powell Into someone else's pocket.

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Right. Or are you looking at the idea of a massive mortgage and feeling utterly terrified by the sheer weight of it?

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Aaron Powell Which is so common.

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Because if you are, you are completely normal. Our whole goal with this conversation today is to take those massive looming fears and shrink them down to size.

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Aaron Powell And we do that by shining a very bright, very clear light on the actual facts.

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Facts over fear. I love that.

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And the most foundational fact, the engine that really drives this entire conversation, is the underlying financial mechanism of real estate.

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Okay, let's get into it.

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Because before we even entertain a conversation about, you know, what kind of house you want.

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Right, or what neighborhood you like.

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Or whether you want a big backyard for a dog, before any of that, you have to understand why real estate is an entirely different animal from simply paying for a roof over your head.

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Okay, let's unpack this. Yeah. Because usually when we pay for something, we just buy it.

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Right.

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You pay for a sandwich, you eat it, it's gone.

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Aaron Powell Delicious, but gone.

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Exactly. You pay for a car, you drive it off the lot, and it immediately loses like 20% of its value.

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Instantly.

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But real estate operates on this almost magical financial principle. It basically turns your living expense into a wealth generating machine.

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Aaron Powell It does. And it operates on the principle of leverage. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

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Leverage. Okay.

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According to our expert, leverage is essentially using a very small amount of your own cash, which is your down payment, to control a massive, highly valuable asset.

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Aaron Powell I always think of it like an actual physical lever from like high school physics.

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Oh, that's a good way to look at it.

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Yeah, like if you try to lift a massive boulder with your bare hands, you can't do it. It's impossible.

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Right.

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But if you take a long metal bar and put a tiny little rock under it as a pivot point, you can move a mountain.

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Exactly.

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Your down payment is that tiny rock. It's the fulcrum.

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That visual works perfectly on a mechanical level, but the financial reality is even better.

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How so?

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Because you put down a fraction of the cost, right? And the bank steps in and puts up the rest of the money for the mortgage.

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Right. They float the big loan.

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But here is the critical part: the absolute magic of the whole arrangement. Even though the bank loaned you the vast majority of the money to buy the property, all of the increase in the home's value belongs entirely to you. Aaron Powell Wait, really? Yes. The bank does not get a cut of your home's appreciation.

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That's incredible.

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They just get their agreed-upon interest. That is leverage in action.

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Aaron Ross Powell And that leads directly to the concept of equity. I feel like everybody screams equity, baby, on all these real estate shows. But let's break down what it actually means for a normal person's net worth.

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Aaron Powell Yeah. People throw the word around constantly.

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Trevor Burrus So what is it, practically?

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Aaron Ross Powell Equity is simply the gap between what your home is currently worth on the open market and what you still owe the bank.

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Aaron Powell Just the difference between the two numbers.

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Aaron Powell Exactly. And it builds in two different directions simultaneously.

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Aaron Powell Okay, walk me through that.

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So every month, as you make your regular mortgage payment, a portion of that goes toward the principal.

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Aaron Powell Meaning your actual loan balance goes down.

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Aaron Ross Powell Right. You owe less money over time. But at the same time, historically speaking, the market value of the home goes up.

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Aaron Powell Due to inflation, demand, all that.

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Aaron Powell Exactly. So your debt is shrinking and the asset's value is growing, that widening gap in the middle. That is your equity.

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Wow.

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It is actual wealth that you own, literally trapped inside the walls of the house.

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Aaron Powell Contrast that with renting. I mean, I look at renting as basically a subscription service that you can never ever cancel.

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That is painfully accurate.

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You pay your fee, you get access to the product for 30 days, and then the money just vanishes into the ether.

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Poof. Gone.

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Renting is a 100% loss every single month. You are literally just paying your landlord's mortgage.

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And building their wealth, not yours.

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Exactly.

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That dynamic is exactly why owning a home acts as a forced savings plan.

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Aaron Powell A forced savings plan. I like that phrasing.

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Yeah, because you aren't just buying shelter, you are actively converting your monthly housing expense into a growing asset.

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Trevor Burrus Right, because you have to pay to live somewhere anyway.

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Exactly. So you might as well be depositing a portion of that payment back into your own ultimate net worth.

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Aaron Powell Let's walk through a concrete example to really ground this. Let's talk about our hypothetical guy, Hugo.

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Good old Hugo.

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Let's say Hugo decides to buy a home for, say, $300,000. He uses leverage.

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Aaron Powell Okay.

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So he puts some cash down.

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Aaron Ross Powell Right. He puts down $60,000 of his own cash, which is a 20% down payment.

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Yep.

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And he borrows the remaining $240,000 from the bank.

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Right. So Hugo is in the house, a few years go by. Hugo has been making his regular monthly payments. So he has paid his mortgage down a little bit.

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Aaron Powell Because of the amortization.

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Right. So he now owes the bank, let's say, $235,000. Down from $2,000. Exactly. But meanwhile, the real estate market has ticked upward. The home's value has gone up slightly to $310,000.

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Okay. So to find his equity, we just look at the gap. The house is worth $310. He owes $235,000.

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Right.

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That means Hugo's equity is $75,000.

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Exactly. But look at the actual return on investment there. It's wild.

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Let's hear it.

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He originally invested $60,000 of his own money.

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Right. His down payment.

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He now has $75,000 in equity. He made $15,000 in wealth using mostly the bank's money.

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That is crazy when you frame it like that.

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Right. If he had just kept that $60,000 in a standard saving account, the growth would be minimal.

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Barely keeping up with inflation.

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Exactly. But because he leveraged it into a $300,000 asset, the appreciation is calculated on the total value of the home, not just his initial deposit.

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Aaron Powell That is the magic of leverage. And then there's the long-term view, which honestly blows my mind when you lay it out side by side.

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The long-term view is where it gets really staggering.

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Let's look at another hypothetical.

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Oh, this is a great example.

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Right. So Sarah decides she values the simplicity of renting, so she keeps renting. Mike decides to buy a home.

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Okay.

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Right now, today, they are both paying roughly the exact same amount in monthly housing costs. Let's call it $1,500.

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Fast forward 30 years, Mike makes his final mortgage payment.

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The finish line.

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The finish line. The home is completely paid off. He now owns a highly valuable asset free and clear.

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And what happened to his monthly costs?

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His monthly housing expense drops dramatically. I mean, all he has to pay to keep a roof over his head is his property taxes and his insurance.

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So his cost of living plummets just as he is likely entering retirement.

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Exactly. Which is huge for financial stability.

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And Sarah.

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Well, she's still paying rent.

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But it is definitely not the $1,500 she was paying 30 years ago.

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Not even close. If rent goes up at an average inflation rate of just 4% per year, a $1,500 monthly rent today will become absolutely staggering in 30 or 40 years.

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Yeah, her rent has likely doubled, maybe even tripled.

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Easily. She has paid well over a million dollars in rent over her lifetime to various landlords, and she holds no asset to show for it.

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It makes you realize how critical getting off the sidelines is. You just can't sit out.

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You really can't.

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And speaking of getting off the sidelines, there are certain groups that have an even more incredible advantage when it comes to leverage.

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Yes. For veterans, this leverage story gets exponentially better.

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How so?

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Well, Joey Matthews of the VA loan nerd is a prominent mortgage broker, and he constantly highlights a fact that totally shifts the math for military families.

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What's the fact?

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Eligible veterans can buy a home with literally zero dollars down.

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Wait, zero.

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Zero.

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Nothing out of pocket to establish that fulcrum point, like no rock under the lever.

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Zero down payment required.

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That's amazing.

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And on top of that, they pay no private mortgage insurance.

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Oh wow. Because usually PMI penalizes buyers who put down less than 20%, right?

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Exactly. But veterans get to bypass that. They put none of their own cash in up front, and yet they still receive 100% of the appreciation as the home grows in value.

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Aaron Powell That is wild. They are getting all the benefits of leverage without having to tie up any of their initial liquidity.

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It is arguably one of the most powerful financial tools available in the modern economy.

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It sounds like it.

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Yet a surprising number of veterans have absolutely no idea this benefit is available to them or they completely misunderstand the requirements.

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That is such a shame. Because the barrier to entry, that upfront pile of cash is usually what keeps people trapped in renting.

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Oh, absolutely. The cash is the hardest part.

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People think you need a massive war chest to even talk to a bank. Let's talk about that archaic myth of the 20% down rule. Why do people still believe this is a hard requirement?

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Aaron Powell Well, it stems from decades-old banking standards. Back in the day, lenders required massive skin in the game to offset their risk. Right. So people hear 20% today and they look at a $400,000 house, realize they need $80,000 in cash, and just give up before they even start.

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Aaron Powell I would give up too if I thought I needed 80 grand just to walk through the door.

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Right. But the modern entry points are drastically lower. They're heavily subsidized or insured by government programs designed specifically to encourage homeownership.

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Aaron Powell Okay. So run through the actual numbers for us. What are people really putting down today?

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Aaron Powell Well, you have FHA loans, which are incredibly popular for first-time buyers.

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Because they're easier to get.

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Yeah. They are much more forgiving on credit scores, and those require as little as 3.5% down.

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Aaron Powell Three and a half. That's way better than 20.

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Huge difference. Then you have conventional loans, which for certain first-time buyers can go as low as 3% down. Wow. We already mentioned VA loans at 0% down for eligible veterans. And there are also USDA loans, which require 0% down for homes in eligible rural and suburban areas.

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Okay. So a mortgage is basically a rent-to-own arrangement for your life. And getting into it is way, way cheaper than our parents told us.

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Exactly.

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But hold on, I have to push back here for a second. Sure. Isn't tying up your cash or taking on hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt for one single localized asset incredibly risky if the broader market dips?

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The common fear.

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Like what happens to our guy Hugo if that $310,000 house suddenly drops in value to $280,000? His $75,000 in equity just evaporated overnight.

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It is a very fair question. And the reality is that home values absolutely can and do go down sometimes. Aaron Powell Right.

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I mean, we all saw what happened during the 2008 financial crisis.

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We did. But the ultimate shield against that risk is time. Yes. Historically, real estate almost always recovers and grows over the long run. If Hugo doesn't need to sell the house the exact year the market drops to 280, it's merely a paper loss.

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Aaron Powell A paper loss. Meaning it's only real if he cashes out.

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Exactly. As long as he can afford his monthly payment, he just keeps living his life, raising his family, building principal equity, and waiting for the market to cycle back up.

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That makes sense. It only becomes a realized loss if you panic or if you are physically forced to sell at the absolute bottom of the market.

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Aaron Powell Precisely. Don't panic, sell.

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So assuming a normal time horizon, let's say Hugo's house value goes up. We've established how equity naturally builds up over time.

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Yes.

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It's almost like water slowly filling up behind a dam in a reservoir.

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I like that analogy.

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Aaron Powell But having millions of gallons of water doesn't do you any good if you can't open the tap to drink it.

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Right. It's just sitting there.

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Let's discuss how you can actually use that equity rather than just sitting on it until you're 80 years old.

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Aaron Powell Well, once you have built up enough equity, you can essentially borrow against it. You use the value of the home as collateral.

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Aaron Powell How does that actually work?

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Aaron Powell The most common ways to do this are through a home equity line of credit, which is known as a AELOC or a standard home equity loan. These are often referred to as second mortgages.

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Aaron Powell Okay. And what are people actually using this money for? Because it's not like cash sitting in a checking account. It's value tied into the bricks and mortar of the house.

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Aaron Powell People use it for major life expenses that require significant capital.

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Aaron Powell Like what?

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They use this money for remodeling an outdated kitchen or paying for a child's college tuition, covering unexpected medical bills or even buying a car. Interesting. The major advantage here is that because the loan is secured by your house, the interest rates on a H E L O C are usually much, much lower than if you were to use a high interest credit card or take out an unsecured personal loan.

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Plus, if you use the money to actually improve the home itself, like putting on a new roof or adding a bedroom, the interest on that loan might even be tax deductible.

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Which is a double win.

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Right. You're using the house to improve the house.

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Exactly.

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But I look at a A-E-L-O-C kind of like a financial Swiss Army knife.

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Oh, how so?

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Well, it is incredibly useful. It can get you out of a jam, you can build things, but you can also very easily cut your own fingers off if you aren't paying close attention. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

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That analogy holds up perfectly, especially when you look at the macroeconomic risks.

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There are risks.

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There is significant danger involved. If you borrow heavily against your home and you suddenly find yourself laid off or unable to pay it back, your actual physical shelter could be on the line.

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Yeah, that's terrifying.

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We really have to bring in Patrick Loftus of Loftus Law here.

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Okay.

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He's a real estate attorney. And the warning he gives about the fine print of 80 ELOCs is genuinely chilling.

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Yo Ling, tell me.

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It is a critical warning. Patrick Loftus points out that unlike your primary mortgage, which usually has a fixed predictable rate for 30 years, most ELOs have variable interest rates.

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Variable, meaning they bounce around.

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Yes. That means they are tied to broader economic indices. If national interest rates rise to combat inflation, your monthly payment on that borrowed money can suddenly spike without you doing anything differently.

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Wow. So you budget for one payment and suddenly the bank is demanding way more.

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Exactly.

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And it gets scarier than just higher payments, right? What happens if the broader economy completely tanks?

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Oh, in a tough economy, a lender can actually freeze your line of credit without much warning at all.

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Wait, they can just cut you off?

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Yep. You might look at your statement and think you have 50 grand of available credit to fall back on in an emergency.

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Right.

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But if property values in your neighborhood start dropping, the bank can unilaterally shut the valve off to protect their own exposure.

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That's insane.

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You suddenly have zero access to that money. That is why it is so critical to know exactly what you were signing before you treat your home like an ATM.

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So let me ask you this then. Is it actually wise to put the literal roof over your head on the line just to pay for depreciating asset like a new car or even a kitchen remodel? Where do we draw the line on what's worth the risk?

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It ultimately comes down to understanding the stark difference between good debt and bad debt.

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Okay.

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And having a deep respect for the collateral you are using. A primary mortgage itself is widely considered good debt.

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Because it builds credit.

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Right. Making massive on-time payments on a long-term loan proves your reliability to credit reporting companies. It meaningfully boosts your credit score, making it easier and cheaper to get approved for future needs like business loans.

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Right. It establishes you as trustworthy.

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But leveraging the shelter you sleep in to buy a car that loses value the second you drive it.

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Yeah, that seems like a bad idea.

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That requires a lot of brutal self-awareness about your job stability, your budget, and your overall financial discipline.

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So the initial mortgage builds your reputation as a responsible adult consumer in the eyes of financial institutions. But you have to guard that reputation carefully.

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You really do.

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Okay, so if building equity is the engine of wealth, it feels like the government is essentially pouring high octane fuel into that engine.

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They absolutely are.

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They actively subsidize this whole process. Let's unpack the hidden tax bonanza because Uncle Sam practically hands you money to encourage homeownership.

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It really is one of the most underutilized benefits of homeownership.

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Why is that?

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Simply because the tax code is so dense that many renters and even new buyers have no idea how much money is being left on the table.

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It's intimidating.

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The government actively encourages home buying through significant tax advantages because homeownership stabilizes neighborhoods and economies.

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But before we get into the massive laundry list of perks, we need to carefully define the terminology here.

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Yes, that's crucial.

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Aaron Powell Because people throw around the phrases tax deduction and tax credit at dinner parties like they mean the exact same thing, but mechanically they are radically different.

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Aaron Powell They operate on entirely different levels of your tax return.

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Break it down for us.

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According to our expert, a tax deduction reduces your taxable income, whereas a tax credit reduces your actual final tax bill dollar for dollar.

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Aaron Powell Let's use an $80,000 annual income example to make this crystal clear for someone who hasn't stared at a tax form recently. Walk us through how a deduction works first.

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Let's say you earn $80,000 this year from your salary.

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Okay.

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If you have a $5,000 tax deduction, the IRS essentially pretends you only made $75,000.

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Aaron Powell Got it. So you aren't saving $5,000 in cash.

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No. You are just saving whatever percentage of tax you would have been charged on that specific $5,000 chunk. Okay. If you are in a 20% tax bracket, a $5,000 deduction saves you about $1,000 in actual taxes.

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Aaron Powell It's good, but it's just saving a percentage. What about the credit?

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Now imagine instead you have a $2,000 tax credit.

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Okay.

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Your income is still recorded as $80,000. The IRS calculates your taxes based on that $80,000. Right. Let's say they determine you owe $10,000 in total taxes. Ouch.

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But okay.

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You apply the $2,000 tax credit and your final bill drops to $8,000. It reduces what you owe dollar for dollar.

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So credits are vastly more powerful. Absolutely. But deductions are much more common and they still add up to massive savings. Let's run through this checklist of deductions that homeowners can take, starting with the biggest one.

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The biggest one by far is the mortgage interest deduction.

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How does that work?

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For mortgages up to $1 million, you can deduct the interest you pay to the bank. Wow. And to understand why this is so huge, you have to look at how a 30-year mortgage is structured.

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The amortization schedule again.

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Right. It is front loaded. In the early years of your loan, the vast majority of your monthly payment goes toward paying off the interest, not the principal balance.

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Oh, right.

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So this deduction is absolutely massive in the first five to ten years of homeownership.

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I always assumed property taxes were just a sunk cost of dealing with local municipalities. But the fact that you can deduct them almost feels like a loophole.

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It's a very intentional feature.

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What other hidden livers are there?

SPEAKER_01

Property taxes are a huge one. Most homeowners pay about 1% of their home's overall value per year in property taxes. And that is generally deductible on your federal return. Then there's the points deduction.

SPEAKER_02

What are points?

SPEAKER_01

When you get a mortgage, you have the option to pay upfront fees called points to buy down your interest rate. Those points are tax deductible in the year you pay them.

SPEAKER_02

We mentioned the home improvement loan interest earlier. If you add a deck or finish a basement using a H E L O C. What about the modern reality of remote work? Everyone is working from home now.

SPEAKER_01

The home office deduction is incredibly relevant today.

SPEAKER_02

Can anyone take it?

SPEAKER_01

Well, if you use a specific part of your home exclusively and regularly for a business, you may be able to deduct a portion of your overall home expenses, including utilities and insurance, proportional to the square footage of that office.

SPEAKER_02

That adds up quick.

SPEAKER_01

There are also deductions for moving costs, specifically if you have to move more than 50 miles for a new job. Good to know. And finally, if you ever pay off your mortgage early or refinance and the bank hits you with a prepayment penalty, even that penalty fee is tax deductible.

SPEAKER_02

That is an unbelievable list of ways to lower your taxable income.

SPEAKER_01

It really is.

SPEAKER_02

And those are just the deductions. What about the dollar-for-dollar credits?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell For credits, there are often first-time home buyer credits, though those tend to come and go depending on whatever legislation is currently passing through Congress.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell Sure, that fluctuates.

SPEAKER_01

But a really big, consistent one right now is energy efficiency credits.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell Oh, like solar.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The government wants to incentivize green energy. If you install solar panels, geothermal heat pumps, or even small wind turbines on your property, you may be eligible for a massive federal tax credit worth up to 30% of the entire installation cost.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell 30%? That is huge. It is. Okay, but here's the reality check. To actually get all these deductions, you have to do the math on itemizing your taxes.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. You can't just take the standard route.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell I compare taking the standard deduction to ordering a basic combo meal at a drive-thru.

SPEAKER_00

I like that.

SPEAKER_02

It's fast, it's easy, you hand your W-2 to an accountant, and everyone gets the same basic discount. Right. But itemizing a house on your taxes is like going to a high-end sprawling buffet. You have to do the work.

SPEAKER_00

You really do.

SPEAKER_02

You have to walk around, pick your dishes, read the labels, and plate it yourself. But the ultimate value of what you walk away with is vastly higher.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell The Buffet analogy is perfect because it requires effort, but the sheer volume of what is available makes it worth it.

SPEAKER_02

Exactly.

SPEAKER_01

Every year the IRS gives you a choice. Take the standard deduction or itemize all your individual deductions and see if they add up to a bigger number. Right. According to our expert, the standard deduction for a single filer is roughly $6,200.

SPEAKER_02

$6,200.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. But when you own a home, your itemized deductions often blow right past that number with total ease.

SPEAKER_02

Break down the math on a basic middle class house so we can see how quickly you beat the combo meal.

SPEAKER_01

Let's say you get a $200,000 mortgage at a 4% interest rate.

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

In just your very first year of owning that home, you will pay nearly $8,000 in mortgage interest alone.

SPEAKER_02

Stop right there.

SPEAKER_01

Yep.

SPEAKER_02

The standard deduction is $6,200. Just your interest alone is $8,000.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly.

SPEAKER_02

You've already beaten the standard deduction before you even count property taxes, points, or a home office.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. If you're single and you just take the standard combo meal deduction of $6,200, you save a little bit on your taxes. Sure. But if you itemize just that single $8,000 mortgage interest deduction, you have shielded almost $2,000 more of your income from taxes. Wow. And then you add your $2,000 in property taxes and maybe some points, and the savings just compound exponentially.

SPEAKER_02

And there's one more massive tax benefit, but this one happens at the very end of the journey. When you finally decide to sell the house, you aren't penalized for your success.

SPEAKER_01

Right. It is called capital gains relief.

SPEAKER_02

Capital gains relief.

SPEAKER_01

And it is arguably the most powerful wealth-building tool available to the middle class.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell Why is that?

SPEAKER_01

When you eventually sell your home for a profit, you may not owe a single dime of capital gains tax on that profit.

SPEAKER_02

Wait, tax-free profit?

SPEAKER_01

Yes. For single filers, you can make up to $250,000 in tax-free profit.

SPEAKER_02

That's nuts.

SPEAKER_01

For married couples filing jointly, it is up to $500,000 in pure tax-free profit.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell Half a million dollars tax-free. What is the catch? The IRS doesn't just hand out half a million dollars without strings attached.

SPEAKER_01

True. The main requirement is that it has to be your primary residence.

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

You need to have lived in the home for at least two of the last five years before selling it.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell So that prevents people from just flipping houses every six months.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. This prevents real estate flippers from exploiting the rule for quick profits. But for normal homeowners, this is exactly how people step up.

SPEAKER_02

Step up, like upgrading their home.

SPEAKER_01

Right. They buy a starter home, live in it, build equity, sell it five years later, pocket a massive chunk of tax-free profit, and use all of that cash as a down payment to buy something much bigger and better.

SPEAKER_02

It is generational wealth building in plain sight.

SPEAKER_01

It really is.

SPEAKER_02

This brings us back to Patrick Loftus, the real estate attorney we mentioned earlier.

SPEAKER_00

Yes.

SPEAKER_02

He notes that while these rules are powerful, they have a lot of nuances, they change often, and people constantly mess them up.

SPEAKER_01

They absolutely do. Patrick Loftus strongly advises that buyers and sellers often leave a tremendous amount of money on the table simply because they do not know what questions to ask.

SPEAKER_02

They just assume the tax software will figure it out.

SPEAKER_01

Right, which is a huge mistake. That is why he encourages clients to sit down with a qualified tax professional, especially in the specific year they buy or sell a home.

SPEAKER_02

Hiring a pro to navigate this buffet pays for itself many times over.

SPEAKER_01

100%.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, but realistically I have to ask. Does the average person actually have the discipline to keep every single Home Depot receipt for a ceiling fan, every hardware store invoice for a new sink, and every insurance statement in a folder for a decade? It sounds exhausting, right? How hyper-organized do you really have to be to make this high-end buffet work for you?

SPEAKER_01

You do need to cultivate a baseline of organization.

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Creating a centralized folder, whether it is a physical accordion folder in a filing cabinet or just a dedicated digital folder on your phone where you snap photos of receipts, is vital.

SPEAKER_02

Just a habit of taking pictures.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Because any improvement that adds value to your home or prolongs its life can potentially be factored into your tax basis when you sell.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, I see.

SPEAKER_01

When tax time comes or when it is time to sell and calculate your capital gains, that folder is absolute gold.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell So it requires a habit of discipline, but the financial payoff is undeniably worth the effort.

SPEAKER_01

Without a doubt.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. We have done the heavy math. We've talked leverage, taxation, deductions, and amortization schedules.

SPEAKER_01

We covered a lot of ground.

SPEAKER_02

If the financial and structural benefits are this overwhelming, we need to completely pivot. Let's move from the spreadsheets to humanity.

SPEAKER_00

I like that.

SPEAKER_02

Because at the end of the day, you do not live inside a tax return. You live in a home.

SPEAKER_00

Very true.

SPEAKER_02

Let's talk about the finish line, personal freedom, and finally saying goodbye to the landlord dynamic.

SPEAKER_01

This is often the most powerful visceral motivation for people. It really transcends the math. It is about security.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, that emotional weight.

SPEAKER_01

Try to picture the actual day you make your very last mortgage payment. Oh man. The bank sends you an official letter of release. The lien is removed. The home is 100% yours.

SPEAKER_02

The psychological weight of that must be incredible. Your biggest living expense just drops to practically zero.

SPEAKER_01

It fundamentally changes your life trajectory. Nobody can take it from you, nobody can raise your monthly payment based on market rates. Nobody can tell you your lease isn't being renewed. Renters simply never get a finish line. As we discussed earlier with Sarah, you could rent the exact same apartment for 50 years, pay off the landlord's mortgage twice over, and on year 51, you are still required to write a check every single month just to keep a roof over your head.

SPEAKER_02

That sounds like a nightmare.

SPEAKER_01

That kind of absolute security that owning gives you, particularly as your earning power decreases in retirement, is priceless.

SPEAKER_02

And beyond the sheer security, there is the raw creative freedom, the psychology of nesting and personalization.

SPEAKER_00

Making it yours.

SPEAKER_02

Right. If you're renting, the walls stay apartment white. The ugly linoleum floor stays ugly. You're afraid to hang too many pictures because you'll lose your security deposit.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, I remember those days.

SPEAKER_02

But when you own it, if you want to paint your living room a deep navy blue, or take a sledgehammer to a wall to open up the kitchen, or rip up the entire front lawn to plant a massive vegetable garden, you just do it.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, just do it.

SPEAKER_02

You don't have to draft an email asking for permission.

SPEAKER_01

That psychological benefit of having a space that is truly, completely yours, is hard to quantify, but it deeply affects your daily happiness. I can imagine. People who never even thought they cared about decorating or landscaping or DIY renovations often discover an entirely new creative side to themselves once they actually own the physical space.

SPEAKER_02

It becomes an extension of their identity rather than just a storage unit for their stuff.

SPEAKER_00

Perfectly said.

SPEAKER_02

And the flip side of that joy is the relief of no longer having to deal with landlord surprises. Let's be honest, I compare having a landlord to living in your parents' house as a teenager.

SPEAKER_00

That's a funny way to look at it, but yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Sure. It's nice that if the window breaks or the fridge dies, someone else pays to fix it. But the trade-off is that you are ultimately living by someone else's rules on someone else's property. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

The power dynamic is inherently skewed.

SPEAKER_02

Always.

SPEAKER_01

Even with the best, most responsive landlord in the world, you are entirely vulnerable to their life circumstances.

SPEAKER_02

Like if they go bankrupt.

SPEAKER_01

Right. They can decide to sell the building out from under you because they want to retire. They can hit you with a massive unexpected rent hike, at least renewal because the market rate went up.

SPEAKER_02

Or they just ignore you.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. They can stop responding to maintenance requests, leaving you waiting weeks for a simple plumbing repair. They might walk through the property with very little notice. You are ultimately a temporary guest in their financial asset.

SPEAKER_02

When you buy, you trade all those anxieties for personal responsibility. Yes, if the water heater breaks, you have to buy a new one. But you gain total autonomy.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. You say goodbye to strangers having a master key to your home. You gain complete control over who enters your space and when.

SPEAKER_02

Which brings in a really interesting boots on the ground perspective from Charlie Bellefontaine of Chicagoland Home Inspectors.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, yes.

SPEAKER_02

He's a professional home inspector, so he spends his life crawling through attics and basements. He sees the physical reality of these emotional concepts every single day.

SPEAKER_01

He really does. Charlie Bellefontaine observes that within five minutes of walking into a property, he can usually tell the difference between a home that has been rented out to tenants and a home that has been owner-occupied.

SPEAKER_02

Really? Just five minutes. How so? What is the physical difference?

SPEAKER_01

It comes down to the physical manifestation of pride of ownership.

SPEAKER_02

Pride of ownership.

SPEAKER_01

Tenants, understandably, do not invest their own money to upgrade or meticulously maintain a property they don't own.

SPEAKER_02

Obviously not.

SPEAKER_01

They might ignore a slow leak under the sink because it's not their cabinet being ruined.

SPEAKER_02

Out of sight, out of mind.

SPEAKER_01

But homeowners take pride in their properties. A well-loved, owner-maintained home doesn't just feel better to live in on a daily basis, it actually holds its physical integrity and its financial value far better over time.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell Makes total sense. But let me push back on this whole finish line concept for a second.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, leave it on me.

SPEAKER_02

Is the finish line actually a bit of a romantic illusion? How do you mean even when the mortgage is totally paid off and the bank send you that golden letter, don't you still have to pay property taxes to the city and homeowners' insurance forever? You never truly live for free, right?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell That is technically true, and it's an important caveat. The carrying costs of municipal taxes and property insurance never go away.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell So the finish line is a bit of a mirage.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Well, not exactly, because comparing those costs to paying full market rent is like comparing a puddle to an ocean.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell A puddle to an ocean.

SPEAKER_01

Your monthly financial burden is drastically reduced. You transition from paying to acquire the massive asset itself to merely maintaining your community obligations and protecting the asset from fire or disaster.

SPEAKER_02

Ah, I see.

SPEAKER_01

It is a fundamental life-altering shift in financial pressure.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell Okay, fair enough. The puddle versus the ocean. So if the financial and emotional benefits are this overwhelming, the logical question is why absolutely everyone isn't rushing out to buy a house today? And the answer is simple. Taking on six-figure debt is inherently terrifying. Let's look at the actual legitimate fears that are keeping people renting and deconstruct them head on.

SPEAKER_01

These hesitations are real, they aren't silly, and they shouldn't be dismissed.

SPEAKER_02

Let's start with fear number one. But I genuinely like renting.

SPEAKER_01

And that is a totally valid position. Renting gets a bad rap in financial circles, but it genuinely makes more sense in a lot of situations. Like what? If you are highly transient and planning to move to a different city in the next two to three years, the transaction costs of buying and selling will wipe out your equity. Renting is smarter.

SPEAKER_02

Keep your bags packed, basically.

SPEAKER_01

Right. If you need maximum flexibility to travel, or you might suddenly quit your job to start a business, or if you expect a significant drop in your income because you're going back to grad school, absolutely keep renting.

SPEAKER_02

So renting basically buys you flexibility and mobility.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. You pay a premium for the ability to walk away at the end of 12 months. But if none of those transient situations apply to you, you have to face the hard macroeconomic truth. Cheap rent isn't free rent.

SPEAKER_02

What do you mean?

SPEAKER_01

You will pay housing costs for the rest of your life either way. You are just choosing whether to pay yourself or pay an investor.

SPEAKER_02

That's a great way to put it. Now, fear number two is probably the loudest one, especially today, but I can't afford it. Oh yeah. The price tag on a house is just a giant, scary six-digit number that paralyzes people.

SPEAKER_01

It is deeply intimidating, especially when you are already managing rent, car payments, grocery inflation, and student loans.

SPEAKER_02

It feels impossible.

SPEAKER_01

But the key is remembering that the big number gets spread out over 15 to 30 years. And more importantly, the first home you buy does not have to be your dream home.

SPEAKER_02

People forget that.

SPEAKER_01

It doesn't have to be perfect and it doesn't have to be forever. It just has to be a foot in the door of the real estate market.

SPEAKER_02

There is a story here about Karen and Alec, which I think perfectly illustrates the reality of making that leap.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Karen and Alec were a young couple who were stretched pretty thin financially when they finally decided to buy a starter home.

SPEAKER_02

Very common scenario.

SPEAKER_01

They were warned by their lender that based on their budget, they might literally have to eat spaghetti for a year while their finances settled.

SPEAKER_02

Spaghetti for a year.

SPEAKER_01

And that first year was indeed incredibly tight. Every penny was accounted for.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, hold on. I am gonna vehemently push back on this spaghetti for a year advice. Isn't it actually incredibly dangerous to encourage young buyer to stretch themselves so incredibly thin that they literally have to eat cheap pasta for a solid year just to afford a house?

SPEAKER_01

It sounds risky.

SPEAKER_02

How do you know the difference between things being tight but manageable and a family actively heading straight for foreclosure because they are overleveraged?

SPEAKER_01

That is a very serious concern, and it's a line that professionals have to walk carefully. Steve Davis of Real Brokerage provides critical perspective here.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, what does he say?

SPEAKER_01

He is a real estate agent who has guided nervous clients through these exact affordability fears. His overarching experience is that the spaghetti for a year sacrifice isn't about ignoring financial reality or bypassing strict underwriting standards. Lenders won't approve you if the hard math says you will default. The sacrifice is about the temporary shock to your lifestyle system.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell Explain that shock. What does it actually look like?

SPEAKER_01

You go from a predictable flat rent payment to a new mortgage, new property taxes, different utility bills, and suddenly having to buy a lawnmower and a snow shovel.

SPEAKER_02

The hidden costs.

SPEAKER_01

It feels overwhelming at first because your cash flow is disrupted. But Steve Davis points out that the sacrifice is usually about lifestyle adjustments, eating out less, pausing expensive vacations, buying generic groceries, not literally starving. I see. It's a temporary discipline squeeze for a permanent asset. Got it.

SPEAKER_02

It's a lifestyle squeeze, not a solvency crisis. You still have emergency reserves, you just aren't going out for sushi every Friday.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_02

And speaking of affordability, let's bring Joey Matthews back into the conversation.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Joey Matthews reiterates his earlier point about VA loans here because it completely changes the affordability conversation for veterans.

SPEAKER_02

Right.

SPEAKER_01

Because of the zero-down Because a VA loan requires zero dollars out of pocket for a down payment, that initial lifestyle squeeze is drastically reduced. You aren't wiping out your entire life savings just to get the keys, so you have more breathing room in that first year.

SPEAKER_02

But what about civilians who don't have VA access? What about co-buying or down payment assistance?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, there are hundreds of local and federal grants and low interest loans specifically designed for first-time buyers.

SPEAKER_02

People just don't know about them.

SPEAKER_01

You can also use documented gift funds from family members. And if doing it alone is still too hard, the market is adapting. Exploring co-buying, purchasing a duplex or a house with a trusted friend or a sibling is becoming much more common to split the burden.

SPEAKER_02

Which perfectly transitions to fear number three.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

But I'm single. I hear this all the time. I'll wait until I'm married or settle down to buy a house.

SPEAKER_01

And that waiting is costing single people dearly in lost equities. Is it really? Nearly one in five home buyers today is a single woman. Every single month you wait to buy because you think you need a traditional nuclear family is another month of equity building that you completely miss out on. You shouldn't wait for a partner to start building your own wealth.

SPEAKER_02

The story of Hannah really illustrates this mindset shift. Tell us what Hannah did.

SPEAKER_01

Hannah was in her late 20s, single, successful in her career, and decided not to wait around for a hypothetical future. She bought a small condo entirely on her own.

SPEAKER_02

Good for her.

SPEAKER_01

A couple of years later, she met Chad, who also happened to own a small starter home.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, wow.

SPEAKER_01

They got married, she moved into his house, and instead of selling her condo, they rented it out for extra monthly income.

SPEAKER_02

A real estate power couple right out of the gate.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. Later, when they had kids and needed more space, they sold both properties. They combined the massive equity from both homes to buy a beautiful large family home.

SPEAKER_02

That's brilliant.

SPEAKER_01

Hannah's decision to buy a condo alone did not hold her back or complicate her life. It actively set her and her future family years ahead financially.

SPEAKER_02

Now, fear number four, it's too much responsibility. We talked about this a bit with the landlord comparison. Renting is undeniably simpler. You write one check, the fridge breaks, you make a phone call, and go about your day.

SPEAKER_01

It is mechanically simpler, but you have to frame this as a necessary shift in perspective. The burden of responsibility does not actually disappear when you rent, it just takes a different form. Oh, so if you don't pay your rent, the ultimate consequence is eviction and homelessness. You are already accustomed to managing a massive critical monthly obligation.

SPEAKER_02

Right. The stakes are already life or death. You're just used to the routine.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. Owning simply adds the physical maintenance to the equation, but it also gives you the ultimate freedom to prioritize that maintenance.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell What do you mean by prioritize?

SPEAKER_01

If you rent and the landlord wants to rip up the kitchen for three weeks, you have to live in a construction zone. If you own and you have a squeaky stare and you don't want to fix it right now because you're busy, you don't have to.

SPEAKER_02

You just ignore it.

SPEAKER_01

You can ignore it until next year. You are the CEO of the property, you dictate the timeline.

SPEAKER_02

And then there's fear number five, the big macroeconomic fear that keeps people up at night. What if prices drop right after I buy?

SPEAKER_01

Timing the real estate market is notoriously impossible for absolutely everyone, including professional Wall Street investors and PhD economists. Well, nobody can time it. Nobody.

SPEAKER_02

So what should a buyer focus on instead of obsessively checking market timing charts?

SPEAKER_01

Focus entirely on your personal timeline and your personal budget. Run the numbers on your own life.

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Can you afford the monthly payment comfortably right now? Do you plan to stay in the home or at least keep it as a rental for at least five to seven years?

SPEAKER_02

And if yes.

SPEAKER_01

If the answers are yes, short-term market price fluctuations matter much less than your long-term housing stability. Time in the market always beats timing the market.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, we've named the fears, we've looked at the math, but just naming the fears isn't enough to make them go away.

SPEAKER_01

No, it isn't.

SPEAKER_02

How do we practically disarm them before you actually step foot into an open house and start feeling overwhelmed?

SPEAKER_01

Fear is most powerful when it stays vague and amorphous. The minute you start breaking a massive anxiety down into specific, actionable steps, it starts to shrink. There is a five step fear reduction plan that tackles this systematically.

SPEAKER_02

Walk us through the mechanics of those five steps. How do we actually execute this?

SPEAKER_01

Step one is to brutally assess your strengths and your gaps. Self awareness is key.

SPEAKER_02

Like knowing what you're capable of.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. Are you handy with tools? Great, you can buy a fixer upper. If you don't know how to Hold a screwdriver, acknowledge that, and budget for a handyman right from the start so you aren't overwhelmed by minor repairs. That's smart.

SPEAKER_02

What's step two?

SPEAKER_01

Step two is to build your team. You do not have to know everything about real estate if you surround yourself with experienced professionals.

SPEAKER_02

Like who?

SPEAKER_01

An agent who knows the neighborhoods, a lender who understands the math, an inspector who knows structural integrity, and an attorney who understands the contracts.

SPEAKER_02

What does step three look like in practice?

SPEAKER_01

Step three is to obsessively research your local market. Knowledge is the ultimate antidote to fear.

SPEAKER_02

So just go to open houses.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Go to open houses you have no intention of buying. Look at what $300,000 actually gets you in different zip codes. The more you understand local pricing trends, the less scary and arbitrary the numbers feel.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, and step four.

SPEAKER_01

Step four is to learn the logistical process end to end from pre-approval to closing day so there are no administrative surprises. And the final step. Step five is to get extremely organized with those folders and financial checklists we talked about earlier. Get your pay stubs and tax returns ready before anyone asks for them.

SPEAKER_02

I love the team aspect of this. It's like walking into a massive pitch black room.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

It is absolutely terrifying because you don't know what's in there. You're imagining monsters in every corner. But the team you build, the inspectors, the agents, the attorneys, they are simply the light switches. You flip them on, and suddenly you see it's just a room with some furniture. There are no monsters, just logistics.

SPEAKER_01

That is exactly why independent inspections are so vital to the process. Charlie Belfontaine points out that the sheer terror of what might be secretly failing behind the drywall, the outdated wiring, the cracked foundation, the hidden mold, is exactly why a thorough professional home inspection exists.

SPEAKER_02

To shine a light.

SPEAKER_01

His entire job is to shine a massive floodlight into every single dark corner, attic, and crawl space. By the time you sit down at the closing table, there should be zero surprises. Only documented facts.

SPEAKER_02

And once that fear is reduced by facts, you can take a breath. Yeah. You can finally start thinking about the fun stuff, the lifestyle factors, whether you want to be near a park, the architectural style of the home you actually want to wake up in every day.

SPEAKER_01

And it's important to emphasize that during this whole transitional process, there are no dumb questions. You are paying your team to help you. Asking basic things like what exactly is escrow or what does title insurance do is completely necessary.

SPEAKER_02

Because nobody is born knowing this.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. It's also worth noting that the emotional toll is high. Crying at a showing because you are overwhelmed or frustrated is totally normal and happens more than you would think. The financial stakes are high and the emotion is incredibly real.

SPEAKER_02

It really is a crucible. So as we wrap up this happy hour deep dive, I want to zoom out for a second. We spent an hour talking deeply about the individual, your taxes, your equity, your paint colors, your fears. But buying a house is also a massive shift in how you relate to the world around you.

SPEAKER_01

It is a profound shift. If renting is essentially just subscribing to a transient lifestyle for a little while, buying a home is purchasing a permanent physical stake in a community's future, you are anchoring yourself.

SPEAKER_02

Exactly. So here's a thought I want to leave you with to just mull over as you go about your day.

SPEAKER_00

Let's hear it.

SPEAKER_02

How does actually owning the dirt beneath your feet change the way you interact with your neighbors? How does it change the way you look at the funding for your local schools, or the way you vote on local zoning issues, or how much you genuinely care about your town's economic future? When the dirt is yours, the community's future is fundamentally your future.

SPEAKER_01

It changes your entire perspective on society.

SPEAKER_02

It really does. Thank you so much for joining us for this happy hour deep dive. Remember to keep questioning, keep learning, and most importantly, remember that you absolutely do not have to figure all of this out alone. Build your team, shrink your fears, and we will see you next time.