I find that it's less about comparing properties (Zillow, et al have some features there) and more about investigating what you truly want (and can afford!)
A big part of the problem is that what you think you want may not be what would actually be best for you (e.g., a short walking commute may bring much more quality of life than a larger yard, or conversely, you may have dogs and so a few minutes in the car is entirely worth it for a dog-run yard).
Which is one of the reasons that renting when you're young and mobile is something I recommend - and do NOT rent just "what you think you want" but try apartments, houses, suburbs, as many different things for a year or so and get a feel for it.
Then when it comes time to buy you'll know yourself better.
jun_dev 4 days ago [-]
I've heard stories of folks who regret their purchases, and it isn't so easy to just pack up and move. So yep, that's a good idea, even if I didn't do that myself.
blitzar 4 days ago [-]
The vibe is strong with the coding.
jun_dev 4 days ago [-]
Definitely used LLMs for sure, and I'm sure experienced folks like yourself can spot that pretty quick! Mostly using ChatGPT and a little bit of Claude, both through web browser, and have yet to touch the likes of Cursor/Copilot etc.
Rendered at 20:20:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.
A big part of the problem is that what you think you want may not be what would actually be best for you (e.g., a short walking commute may bring much more quality of life than a larger yard, or conversely, you may have dogs and so a few minutes in the car is entirely worth it for a dog-run yard).
Which is one of the reasons that renting when you're young and mobile is something I recommend - and do NOT rent just "what you think you want" but try apartments, houses, suburbs, as many different things for a year or so and get a feel for it.
Then when it comes time to buy you'll know yourself better.