A house is an investment and not just an expense like a car.
Not so much anymore. Maybe in some areas, but certainly not all.
(Preaching to the choir here I know), You could always count on a 3% annual appreciation in the past. The 08 market crash changed that and despite the markets best effort to hide it's scars and pretend like all is well and back to normal, the housing industry is still on shaky grounds and the financial gurus all know it. There is still rampant price balooning going on as well. And one quarter it's a sellers market, and then the next quarter it's a buyers market. This is also part of the reason the federal reserve still haven't raised that key interest rate they are always talking about, and borrowing rates are still so low.
Like you guys, we purchased another property last year. We had a closed sale property (an estate) opportunity that was too good to let pass. Our daughter and husband positioning themselves to buy a first home, but needed more employment time. (they had just moved back from Montana 12 months earlier, ex-military). They were forking out $900 month in rent on a leased house for the four of them. We bought the place, and they are now in the process of securing their own mortgage to take it off of us for what is owed on it. We just didn't want to lose the property, especially at these interest rates.
It's a really nice 40 year old home and priced well in the sale, but the going rate in the neigborhood is dictating it's "open market sale value".
We've seen numerous houses, really nice places, in the same neigborhood start out priced high but then sell for less than they were worth. Many homeowners are still taking a beating on their properties.
If we were to put our home on the market we would lose as well, (and we've lived here for 21 years) because of what has happened in the market. So were stuck with it. (not that were wanting to sell, we are in a great location and have cheap tax's).
It's still a good thing to buy a home, but times gave changed.