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750 square feet - 5 people

130 replies

Nimbus1999 · 16/03/2024 18:46

Currently going through a divorce and toying with the idea of buying a 750 square feet house for 5 of us (1 adult, 4 children aged 7-13). The plan would be 2 kids share biggest bedroom & other 2 a room each and I’ll sleep on sofa/in trundle bed in kids room. Downstairs in just a living room and separate kitchen diner.

pros - I can afford it without stretching myself financially, close to school, good location.

obvious cons - very small!

Has anyone got any experience / has made this work? I would hope it wouldn’t be forever, maybe 2-3 years until I find my feet.

Thanks for reading

OP posts:
jamaisjedors · 16/03/2024 18:50

Wow that's small! 68m2 according to Google. I was looking at downsizing with 1 teenager and two of us and 90m2 felt really small...

Namechange1345677 · 16/03/2024 18:55

Too small. Probably would do short term. But not for any reasonable length of time

Nimbus1999 · 16/03/2024 18:56

1-2 years?!

OP posts:
Octopuslethargy · 16/03/2024 18:59

3 bed at 750 feet?
750 feet is a large 1 bed flat or very small 2 bed.

Twiglets1 · 16/03/2024 19:05

Nimbus1999 · 16/03/2024 18:56

1-2 years?!

Is it worth buying somewhere for such a short time? Maybe better to rent if you only plan to be there for a year or two

cestlavielife · 16/03/2024 19:09

You might need additional storage rental
Of course it will be fine but tight.
But if good location etc then can work if you want it to

Nimbus1999 · 16/03/2024 19:17

Rent is too expensive, way more than a mortgage on a 3 bedroom place.

Just double checked and it’s 795. 2 rooms downstairs and 3 bedrooms. Has a garage also so at least some room for storing stuff!

OP posts:
heldinadream · 16/03/2024 19:22

Four things occur to me. How it is designed/configured makes a huge difference. Having a garage is a major plus. If it means you move on from a divorce it's def not to be sniffed at. Any garden? If so, could you add a garden room? For you, or playspace for the kids, or another living room?

SpringOfContentment · 16/03/2024 19:22

2 kids in each of 2 bedrooms, and the smallest room for you could work as a 3 bed. But it's going to be tight, and selling with that amount of stuff could prove tricky.
Buying and selling houses is expensive. I'm not sure as a 1-2 year plan it's financially a great idea, but it might be your only option.

Seaside3 · 16/03/2024 19:34

I wouldnt do it for such a short time, moving is expensive and stressful.

I also don't think it's feasible to use a lounge as a bedroom long term. Can you not put two kids per room and have one for yourself? What about the loft? Can that be an extra room?

MusicMum80s · 16/03/2024 19:35

Is there any scope for making it bigger like a loft conversion. As you smallest children get older it won't be feasible and moving and selling in such a short period of time is both expensive and risky. I would try to find somewhere with more longevity and space where you had your own bedroom. I agree that if two of the rooms are doubles, then get the older two to share assuming they are the same sex. Lots of kids shared growing up all the way until 18 so that would be a more reasonable approach if you really can't afford anymore and you can take the single bedroom.

Nimbus1999 · 16/03/2024 19:43

I will have no spare money so won’t be able to do any renovations, will have to make it work as it is.

I could put the other 2 in a room together BUT the room is quite small and DD is infant school age and other DD is secondary school age so I just don’t think it would work. Older DD likes her own space….

Figured the cost of rent for 2 years is approx £38,000 (£1,600 per month). Buying would be say £10,000 moving costs plus interest of about £7,000 on the mortgage (fixed at 1.69% luckily) so surely makes financial sense to suck it up for a couple of years…. And then after 2 years, paid off some of the mortgage, hopefully got a payrise, house prices might have increased etc etc.

It’s all a gamble as you don’t know what’s going to happen. I just don’t know if it would be unmanageable! It does have a garden also so that’s a bonus.

OP posts:
Nimbus1999 · 16/03/2024 19:56

Floor plan!

750 square feet - 5 people
OP posts:
OhcantthInkofaname · 16/03/2024 19:58

I have 650 sq ft just for me! (and the cat)

Teenangels · 16/03/2024 20:01

You would be mad to move there and then move out in 2-3 years.

The House is too small and your children will grow, and even the biggest room is not even 7 foot wide.

Also your sums do not add up.

Seaside3 · 16/03/2024 20:02

I know your oldest likes her own space, but surely she wouldn't want you in the lounge? 2 kids in each room seems most logical.

Mossstitch · 16/03/2024 20:03

Needs must......5 of us lived in very similar for 13 years after the rise to 17% mortgages in the 90s which necessitated downsizing🤷‍♀️ decent sofa bed in the lounge once kids older and requiring their own space. Better than the alternatives🥺

Nimbus1999 · 16/03/2024 20:05

Teenangels · 16/03/2024 20:01

You would be mad to move there and then move out in 2-3 years.

The House is too small and your children will grow, and even the biggest room is not even 7 foot wide.

Also your sums do not add up.

Why don’t my sums add up?

OP posts:
Plantpott · 16/03/2024 20:09

We have slightly bigger than that for just the two of us and it's too small. We're in the process of buying a bigger home now.

If you're planning on it only being a short time, there's also all the fees related to buying to think about, you might be better off stretching yourself a bit more now.

Revelatio · 16/03/2024 20:11

I can’t believe some estate agents are still putting things in feet!!

No point buying somewhere for 2yrs. Moving costs will eat that up, you’d be better renting.

If it’s the only solution then you’ll have to make it work. I’d worry where the children can do their homework, have a bit of privacy etc., especially if you’ve got no spare cash after.

Emotions will be running high after a break up, I’d try and make it as comfortable as possible, even if you have to take a hit in the short term.

AllTheChaos · 16/03/2024 20:13

So this is basically the bigger version of my house! It’s good you’ll have the garage for storage, will you be able to, for instance, use it store out of season clothes and bedding, children’s toys so you can have just one small box of them in house, and rotate them every few weeks? As well as obvious things like gardening gear, bicycles etc.

I would strongly suggest you have the small bedroom for yourself, you will really need some space to yourself. You could have a single bed (I mean, I’m short so don’t mind a single, you may be tall and need more space), and get a cabin bed, so can have room to keep all of your stuff in there with you? Then bunk beds and two children apiece in the other bedrooms. Little one could always be on a fold out bed with you sometimes to give older child a break, eg when one of them is ill?

This will sound daft, but have you ever watched the BBC programme; ‘Sort your life out with Stacy Solomon’? There’s three generations in my house, and we are very squashed in, and mad as it sounds I’ve found some really good tips on that programme that have helped me to make it work. We’ve been here a few years now, and I’ve finally managed to get into the position to have the loft converted, but tbh had to prioritise that as I have an autistic child who REALLY needs their own space now they are hitting puberty, without that issue I would have waited a few more years.

Buying and selling houses is so expensive, legal fees, stamp duty, and agency fees really add up! I would definitely stay put as long as possible once moved in, to avoid those fees and all of the disruption. Totally agree with you that buying makes more sense than renting though.

The main thing is to minimise the stuff you all have so there’s more room, you can always use curtains / screens etc to create privacy, but clutter is what makes the home feel too small. Alas I speak from experience 😂

Daffsinfeb · 16/03/2024 20:16

I disagree that you're better off renting if you can afford to buy now.

That said, it's never good to rush into a purchase and I would suggest looking at some more properties before commiting. This looks a bit too small for you all to fit in comfortably. Presumably there are other properties within your price range.

Sorry you are going through a divorce. I am two years separated now. 1 DC in a two bed flat around 750 sq ft. Having enough space is one less stress.

Sleepychicken · 16/03/2024 20:17

I lived in that kind of property with 2 DC and we moved when they were 12 and 8, there just wasn’t enough space. I can’t imagine living there with an extra 2 DC. It will be hard but if needs must, you’ll manage.

AllTheChaos · 16/03/2024 20:22

I have just registered that your mortgage is fixed at 1.69%. Has your lender confirmed that you can port this rate to the property you have in mind, for the amount of mortgage you will need? Also, how long is it fixed for? When the fix runs out, you could be looking at 5% (or more, depending on LTV). Would you be able to afford that?

Say it would mean an extra £400 a month (or whatever amount), could you put that amount aside into a savings account each month once you’ve moved? That way you could (a) show yourself you can afford it; (b) have a better idea of how you will manage, what lifestyle you can afford; and (c) you could potentially use that money to reduce the amount owing on the mortgage (and potentially get a better rate) when your fix comes to an end?

Gloschick · 16/03/2024 20:29

I lived in a rental house that size for 18 months with 2 preschoolers and it felt very small. I honestly feel you are getting into overcrowding territory with what you are suggesting, even with a garage. You say it is in a good location near school. Can you compromise on this instead? What could you afford in a different area?

Also your calculations are very short term. The nice mortgage rate will expire and you might not be in a position to sell. You need to base your calculations on current interest rates. It is extremely rare for buying to make sense for 1-2 years. You would be better either renting or buying something bigger in a different location that has more longevity.

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