Buying A Home
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how important is the driveway/garage to you?

the house we're looking at has a one car garage that barely (and might not even) fits our van and the driveway is about half a driveway and doesn't actually fit a car. but we love the house and neighborhood and there is street parking across from the house and on the road next to the driveway. not living there -- i feel like i could get over this, but you never know. is that a dealbreaker for you?
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Re: how important is the driveway/garage to you?

  • i guess i should add that since the driveway is so short, it's only a few steps to the street. so it's not like it would be a big trek out to the car every time.
  • I assume when you say not living there means you plan to rent it. If the garage is too small for a car to fit, you'll have to adjust the amount of rent you can charge. Personally, I'm a picky renter so if I was going to pay for a garage I would want it large enough for my car or at least a driveway large enough for my car.

    Is the garage and driveway size typical for the area? If so, then its probably not as big of a deal. 

  • When we were looking for a house a garage was on our must have list and of course we ended up buying a house without a garage. 2 years later and I really don't miss having one. But we do have a driveway that is long enough to fit both of our cars so unloading grocerys and other bulky items is still convienant for us. We also have a big shed for storage (lawn mower, tools, etc.). The only time I really miss it is if it's raining or snowing really bad but it's really not that bad too deal with.
  • imagebrianabrad:

    I assume when you say not living there means you plan to rent it. If the garage is too small for a car to fit, you'll have to adjust the amount of rent you can charge. Personally, I'm a picky renter so if I was going to pay for a garage I would want it large enough for my car or at least a driveway large enough for my car.

    Is the garage and driveway size typical for the area? If so, then its probably not as big of a deal. 

    no, i meant not living there as in we're looking at buying it for ourselves but i haven't actually gotten to test my car inside it because it has the owner's stuff. we've only measured.

    it's on a street with houses with the same situation (they just have smaller cars and not swagger wagons haha).  

  • The house I grew up in had a two car garage that never had a car in it - it was always just storage. Is there a basement or attic that you can store things in?

    Also, are you in an area where it snows? I really didn't care about the garage either way, but H and FIL were adamant that we should try to find a house that had one so that you don't have to clean the cars off in winter. 

  • A two car garage was a must have to me. We had a bad hail storm that caused $14000 to our cars last year so I'll never be without a garage again if I can help it. :)
  • We don't have a garage but we can park in our driveway.  As long as parking is easy and you can park right in front, it should be fine. 
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  • imagekaylie622:

    The house I grew up in had a two car garage that never had a car in it - it was always just storage. Is there a basement or attic that you can store things in?

    Also, are you in an area where it snows? I really didn't care about the garage either way, but H and FIL were adamant that we should try to find a house that had one so that you don't have to clean the cars off in winter. 

    This!  My dad always had tons of stuff in our 2 car garage -- so it didn't even occur to me when we were looking that one might actually put a car in the garage, I looked to it as storage!  Our new house has a 2 car garage, and I plan to use one side as my workshop for restoring furniture....and DH has been talking about the snow situation, too.  We don't get a ton of it, but he's very into being able to put the car in the garage if that does occur.  So for us, yes, not having a garage was a dealbreaker, because at the very least, we wanted to place to put our outdoor things and tools.

  • I could do a mini driveway if it was in the city and I had one car. I wouldn't prefer it and don't ever plan to live where there is only on street parking.

    I would consider the garage to be storage in your case.

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  • We only looked at places that had at least a one-car garage. I also had a preference for an attached garage.  We landed up in a townhouse with a one-car garage.  I love it for when it's snowed or for when it's pouring when I leave for work.
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  • It could be for me. It was really important for us to have a 2 car garage and decent sized driveway. We have a lot of family and wanted them to have a place to park in our driveway and the street. I also wanted to be able to park both cars in the garage since I got hail damage once.
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  • That would be a deal breaker for me. 2 car garage is non negotiable ( my neighborhood doesn't typically have driveways). I might have been flexible before kids, but it sucks trying to wrangle 2 kids, their stuff, and my stuff while crossing a street. Fortunately, this is just temporary housing. I can't take them in the house and then go bring in groceries the way I could if the car was parked right out front. You also can't assume a spot in front of your house will always be available. And if your city does street sweeping, that's a nightmare. And trying to put 2 kids in their carseats while being outside in the elements sucks. The attached garage is actually what I miss most about my house.
  • It would be a dealbreaker for me. We park both our cars in the garage.
  • It would be a deal breaker for me. But no garage is rare in the areas we were looking, and once you have a garage it sucks not to. I never realized how much nicer it is to have an attached garage until I lived in a place without one.
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  • A garage is irrelevant to me. Not once in my life have I lived in a house with a functional garage (the few that had garages at all were older and the garage was smaller than my mom's compact sedans!). The driveway would be a dealbreaker for me though. While there is on-street parking and it should usually be available in front of your house, you may frequently find that guests or even neighbors have taken the spot in front of your house and there's nothing you can do about it and you have to drive around looking for parking. If a neighbor is having a party you may end up having to walk home quite a bit (this is coming from experience from the house my mom was in while I was in college where only her car fit in the driveway.... on street parking became a huge fight within the neighborhood).
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  • Oh, and I see that you are pregnant with your second. Dragging an infant and screaming toddler from a car down the street all the way to a house is a pain. We live in NYC and park on-street and I can't grocery shop alone because I have no safe way to get kids + bags upstairs. Not having a driveway is something I'll never do again because it has meant not being able to do anything without my husband's help (i.e. come in late with sleeping kids, grocery shop alone, bring laundry to the car to get to the laundromat).
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  • It was a dealbreaker for us.  We wanted and got a 2 car garage. DH and I both wanted to park our cars in the garage.  In hindsight both our parents and all our families also park in their cars in the garage, so it is what we are accustomed to I guess.  I am glad I don't have to deal with the street parking, as our neighbor often complains they really struggle finding parking and end up quite a bit away from our building (we are in a town home).  This is especially true during the winter months when the snowbirds and tourists are here.  As PPs also mentioned, I am glad that I have garage parking for getting my kids into the car. However, if you are really considering it then I would drive through the neighborhood in the evenings and weekend to see how readily available the parking really is.  
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  • I really think this is a "where you live" specific question.  I have always lived in the suburbs.  2 car garages with driveways are pretty standard here so it was on our list of "of courses."  We actually use our garage to park our cars and love that I never have to walk in/out in the rain, scrape ice off my windshield, etc. 

    However, I have friends who are city-dwellers who got excited that their building had street parking.

    So, it is really all relative :)

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  • yes, i'm trying to decide if it's worth missing out on this house because of it. i feel very conflicted about it. but i also don't know if i could even use the garage with an infant seat and toddler because it's so small...i'd be forced to park it on the street anyways. we're in NC so it didn't even come close to snowing this year, but i know that sometimes it does (this is my first year here). i've attached a picture of it so you can see just how close the street is to the door...pretty dang close! we're seeing it again on monday and then i'll have to decide if i'm heartbroken or dealing with it ;)

    ugh. the fact that the garage/parking is what is making me decide if it's a dealbreaker sucks. we've seen so many foreclosures that needed so much work and this one is move in ready and cute. frankly, i just want to say I DON'T CARE! and move right in.
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  • For us at this point, that would be a deal breaker.  Right now we have no garage but can park 4 cars in our driveway. Our next house has a 2 car garage (and the driveway can fit 2 cars, plus street parking).

    Is there any way to expand the garage? And you are saying that you cannot even park a car on the driveway piece? Yeah, not sure that would be acceptable for us...

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  • imagestephm0188:
    It would be a dealbreaker for me. We park both our cars in the garage.

    Same here.

  • Not having a garage would be ok although DH wouldn't say the same. He likes to fix things, build things, etc, so we'd need a place for all of that. However, having a teeny tiny driveway is a HUGE dealbreaker for me. I love having people over, and the idea of having no where for anyone to park drives me batty. 

    We lived in a house with a teeny tiny driveway before, and I swore I'd never do it again. It was a pain. 

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  • The small driveway would be the deal breaker for me.  I hate parking on the street.  I'm always afraid my car is going to get clipped by someone not paying attention.   
  • imageswimbikepuke:

    I've been living in a place without parking for the past 6 years.  It is now a deal breaker for us. Our future home will have a driveway and a garage or we won't even look at it.  I don't know if you have kids, but getting your kids in and out of the car on a street rather than on a driveway or in a garage isn't fun.  Neither are special events in the neighborhood that result in all the parking in front of your house being taken up so you have to park far away and haul your kids across gods creation to get them into your house.

    If nothing else, this could be a resale issue for you.  I don't think I'm the minority on this one.  A lot of people wouldn't even look at such a house. 

    All of this. Renting was a pain with the parking situatio, so when we bought our first house this was a big issue for me.Personally I would keep looking you are going to find something out there that is better.

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  • We wouldn't look at houses that didn't have at least a one car garage capable of fitting my car in it.  DH does most of our car maintenance himself and needs that space (who wants to change the oil in the driveway during winter?  Plus being indoors means he can work at night if necessary.).  And we have kids...getting them to/from the car in bad weather is much easier this way, never mind if I'm also hauling groceries or their gear.

    We preferred a two car garage, but couldn't find one in our preferred area at a price we could afford.  So instead, we bought a house with a one car garage and later spent over six months and a lot of money/effort petitioning the county government for a zoning variance.  Right now we're interviewing contractors to do a bunch of work, including add that second car garage.  And it's absolutely big enough to fit both of our cars and provide some storage space. 

  • For me and the general area I live in and hope to live in, the driveway is important to me but not so much having a garage. Size and slope of it is important as well as how wide it is. I don't care how long it is (only for snow) or how far my car will be.

  • When we were house hunting a garage was top of the list. Then we found a house that didn't have one that we fell in love with because, like you, it was completely move in ready. We jumped.

    There are times we miss the garage. Having a full attic and basement for storage has been helpful. We are also in the planning process for building one next spring. For us, having a completely move in home well below our budget made it worthwhile.


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  • A garage might not be a deal breaker, but off-street parking would be. I currently live in an urban area and having 2 parking spots was a non-negotiable when we moved in to this place. Even though its tandem, I couldn't do without it.

    In the future we might live somewhere with snow, and then we'd probably want at least a 1 car garage. However, if we had a decent driveway where we could park 2 cars and outdoor storage with room to build a garage, we might be okay with that. But the reasons to have off street parking are:

    1) kids

    2) security

    3) location (how close you can actually park)

    4) snow/weather (this also relates to when it snows and you have to park on the street - are their snow parking restrictions in your city, like you can't park on one side of the street during snow clearing?)

    Would you be able to make the driveway/concrete pad WIDER so you can park a car lengthwise? Having length-wise car parking is pretty common in my area.

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  • For us, it is a complete deal breaker. However, we are not the norm. We have toys (motorcycle, boat, snowmobile) + 3 cars. We have a two car attached (my garage) and a 2 car detached (his garage).

    It really is completely relative though. Growing up in Chicago, neither one of us ever had functional garages or even driveways all the time. Now that we have the space, we used it. I dread the day we move and a 4 car garage is on our deal breaker list.

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  • This totally depends on the norm in your area, and the norm for your family.

    I didn't have a garage for the first 11 years of my adult life, and I made it work just fine. I lived near the city center where garages aren't as common, especially for rentals. I was used to cleaning snow off the car in the winter and getting into a burning hot car in the summer. That seemed normal. Until I got a garage. I live in the 'burbs now, with an attached 3-car garage. Now, I can't imagine living without a garage. It's so nice to get into a warm car in the winter than doesn't need to have windows scraped or snow brushed off. I don't worry about hail/storm damage in the summer, I love not having to walk outside to get into my car, I have extra storage space, etc.

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