saseboy said:In short, my husband is Active Duty Navy. We are in Oklahoma. We bought our second home here in a small town about 40 miles away from base. My husband is spending around $120.00 week on gas driving to the base daily. My question is should we rent out our home and move on base to save money in gas?
We receive 847.00 a month housing allowance. If we move on base they take all of this- but we have no utility bills.
Our current mortgage is only 520.00 a month. Our utilities run around 200.00. Figure in gas at 480.00 a month and living off base we are spending 1285.00. It looks obvious, but I wonder if there will be a tax advantage to living in our home off base that will offset this in my favor?(We have another home in Florida that we rent as well. Not sure if this adds to the equation)
In our small town, homes rent for no more than 600.00. (we bought here, because there has NEVER been any crime. EVER. Seriously, never any crimes!)
The other positive to living on base is time. My husband is on the road for 45 minutes each way. If we lived on base, he would have more time with us..
Help me weigh the financial pro's and con's!!
Thank You
Financially:
Current situation
$520 mortgage
$480 gas
$200 utils
= $1200/month - 847 housing allowance = $353 out of pocket
Live on base
$847 all to rent/utils
$520 mortgage
$0 gas
= 520/month - 520? rent = perhaps $0 out of pocket
If you can find renters who pay their own utils, you'd be better off financially on the base. This of course assumes that you save the full $480/month on gas--if you end up driving into town several times a week, you may only save part of that. The maintenance on the house is mostly a wash--since as the landlord or the owner, you're paying either way (though renters might not care for the house as well as you would, resulting in higher maintenance costs--and 80 mile round trips to deal with issues).
As many others have suggested, getting a more fuel efficient car for your husband's commute could also save lots of money, perhaps enough to make staying put equivalent financially (disregarding the commute time factor).
edit: Tax considerations are likely not a factor here. You can check by looking at your last tax return. If you took the standard deduction, then your mortgage interest saved you $0 in taxes. If you itemized, then having the mortgage interest helped you some. To find out how much, just run the numbers again replacing your itemized amount with the standard deduction, and see how much more your taxes would have been. That's your tax benefit.
--For myself and the wife last year, with a $700/month mortgage payment, we only exceeded the standard deduction by several hundred dollars, netting us a $75 lower tax bill. When you include the state tax savings, it was a bit over $100.