How much money was your first house?

Incoming FT IB analyst here. Starting at a large MM in a lower-cost city with an $80k base salary. I’m a first generation finance guy coming from a very middle class background (parents are more senior in their careers and make a combined ~$200k annually). To those w similar (or even different) backgrounds, how much did you buy your first house at? Wondering what kind of financial / lifestyle parameters I’ll have down the line assuming my career trajectory stays roughly constant / goes as expected. Thanks!

19 Comments
 
Most Helpful

The illusion that 200k is middle class is hysterical 

 

Work in a product group at a BB in what most would call a T3 city.

I can from a blue collar, probably slightly upper middle class background. All in my parents made probably something like $120-130k combined.

I bought my townhouse when I was 22 for $185k in 2017. I don’t regret the decision once. Could probably sell it for $240k today.

You will probably get preapproved for a huge mtg. Don’t take the bait. Live within your means and don’t over extend yourself.

 

My uncle passed away due to Covid recently, he was based out of LA. His place is a run-down wooden construct that could qualify as "a shed" with a broken fence around it. If you saw the kitchen or bathroom you would not want to use it, it was that poorly built.
His estate is trying to sell it for 1.35M $US (you are basically paying for the land and would have to build a new house on it).

I really don't know how normal/young people in Southern California would ever be able to buy a home.

 

I mean, OP probably has college educated parents who have worked corporate 9-5s for the last 30 years. They are doing fine/well, but definitely not upper class. At least not in the social sense. 

Caveat that I have a pretty similar background so am biased. But I definitely consider my own family middle class, not upper class. 

Edit: I'm aware that this is not some type of median or mean, but I still think it's middle class in the sense of who you're surrounded by, what kind of life you have, what neighborhood you're in, who you relate to, etc. 

 

What even are these comments. Are you people all living in the middle of the country? $200K for a combined family income on the coasts is not a lot of money, by any stretch of imagination when dilapidated tear-down real estate is $500K or more. 

 

Sure, but this is WSO. Investment banks aren't headquartered out of non-urban centers, and COVID is driving real estate prices through the roof further and further out of urban centers anyway. 

 

I can totally believe that $200k is considered middle class depending on where you live. Especially if that's what OP's parents make now, and not what they were making during OP's entire childhood (~25 years ago they very well could've made closer to $100k combined assuming 3% increase in comp each year).

My current place (1st time owning) was ~$650k at time of purchase after 3 years in IB and 1 in PE. Budgeted only on my base and ascribed 0 credit to bonuses.

 

MBA Associate at a top MM in a VERY low COL city.

First time buyer, just went in on an updated, 3 bed 2.5 bath home, 1900 square feet, in the top school district, for 405k. Two blocks from a park with tennis courts. A few more to a body of water. I'm paying just over 2k all in (taxes, insurance, etc. included).

While long term IB is the goal, even if I last just a few more years I am counting stacks each month with so much flexibility.

Used to live in LA/NYC and can't even fathom going back.

While I certainly could have spent a lot more, I really think the marginal utility is minimal until you reach that "wow" stage of home. At least in my city, 400k vs. 700k is not that big of a gap. 

 

Ipsa ipsa quia placeat. Unde omnis voluptas rerum corrupti quo deserunt maxime sint. Enim vitae similique dicta enim porro sit molestiae.

Et qui numquam quasi totam magni sit. Eius deleniti sit omnis recusandae dolor officia. Ut est dolore quia et eum odit est. In qui at magni quam unde ut non. Eum alias et ad sed soluta voluptas delectus. Molestiae vero neque adipisci esse et facere. Ex tempora quas et ratione modi optio laudantium.

Career Advancement Opportunities

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Evercore 01 99.4%
  • Moelis & Company 01 98.8%
  • JPMorgan 01 98.3%
  • Guggenheim Partners 01 97.7%
  • Morgan Stanley 07 97.1%

Overall Employee Satisfaction

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Moelis & Company No 99.4%
  • Morgan Stanley 02 98.8%
  • Evercore 01 98.3%
  • BMO Capital Markets 12 97.7%
  • Banco Santander 01 97.1%

Professional Growth Opportunities

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Evercore 01 99.4%
  • Moelis & Company 01 98.8%
  • Morgan Stanley 05 98.3%
  • JPMorgan No 97.7%
  • BMO Capital Markets 12 97.1%

Total Avg Compensation

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Vice President (14) $434
  • Associates (44) $258
  • 3rd+ Year Analyst (8) $210
  • 2nd Year Analyst (22) $179
  • Intern/Summer Associate (13) $156
  • 1st Year Analyst (78) $151
  • Intern/Summer Analyst (73) $101
notes
16 IB Interviews Notes

“... there’s no excuse to not take advantage of the resources out there available to you. Best value for your $ are the...”

Leaderboard

1
redever's picture
redever
99.2
2
Secyh62's picture
Secyh62
99.0
3
kanon's picture
kanon
99.0
4
BankonBanking's picture
BankonBanking
99.0
5
GameTheory's picture
GameTheory
98.9
6
dosk17's picture
dosk17
98.9
7
DrApeman's picture
DrApeman
98.9
8
CompBanker's picture
CompBanker
98.9
9
Betsy Massar's picture
Betsy Massar
98.9
10
bolo up's picture
bolo up
98.8
success
From 10 rejections to 1 dream investment banking internship

“... I believe it was the single biggest reason why I ended up with an offer...”