Quote:
Originally Posted by Steely Dan
On that income you can easily afford a family-size home in Lincoln Square, just due north of North Center
We got a 3 bed/3 bath 2,300 SF duplex-down a block away from an excellent CPS elementary school (waters), a block away from a brown line stop, and a 7 minute walk to giddings plaza (the heart and soul of LS) for only $420K.
You'll be just fine to raise your family very comfortably in an awesome, safe, and extremely family-friendly city neighborhood like LS if you move back to chicago.
Now, if you absolutely demand to have a detached SFH to raise a family in, that will be a tougher mission.
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One thing I've observed is that people in Chicago tend to underestimate how much house they can "afford". There are many folks in California earning $175,000 who buy houses that are over a million dollars and don't think twice. I'm not saying that's the way it should be, but some of this is cultural.
If you earn $175,000 a year, keep 80% of that after taxes and spend 30% of the remainder on a house payment, insurance and taxes, that would get you about a $750,000 home, if you could afford to put 20% down. In pleasant Old Irving Park, that would get you a lawn, 2-car garage and maybe a sewing room in a spire, as long as you didn't require a contemporary kitchen with Italian marble.
If you don't want the creaky Victorian, the payment on this brand new five bedreem place would be under $3,000 including taxes
https://www.realtor.com/realestatean...1_M77847-72634
One thing about Chicago that I think posters here consistently get wrong are Chicago schools. The average school in Chicago isn't great, but it's also not gangland. But there are LOTS of good schools here. My nephew attended the Disney Charter in Uptown, which he walked to with his mom from their two bedroom apartment. It seemed wonderful and they greatly preferred it to what they went to in Dewitt, Michigan a few years later, which has some of the highest rated schools in the state. In East Village where I used to live, I wouldn't hesitate to send kids to the local public elementary there, Talcott. It seemed pleasant and joyful.
Every person I know who's in Chicago who's professional with a stable household hasn't had a hard time getting their kids into a good public school here. It might take a little organizing effort from the parents and it helps if the child is a good student, but that's honestly not too much to expect from the type of family that would fit in Naperville.
Honestly the people I know that have moved to the suburbs for their kids schools are by no means racist. But I just always get the feeling that in their hippocampus or amygdyla or whatever they feel "I went to a good school in suburban Grand Rapids and that was mostly white. My kids should go to a mostly white school too, because that's what the expectation is."