Member-only story
What Does Robert Kiyosaki Mean When he Says That Your House is Not an Asset?
And that it is only an asset to banks and mortgage companies?
Kiyosaki’s reality flies in the face of financial planners, real estate agents, brokers, and banks who need to make money.
A house, on its own, as a property, is an asset. But what most Americans don’t realize today is that they aren’t purchasing the home. They are purchasing something called a 30-year mortgage, and they see a tiny interest rate.
Here is a $500,000 home, with $40,000 down at 4% interest over 30 years. I haven’t included property taxes, insurance, or maintenance over the 15 years yet. Even then, your interest paid toward the home for the first 15 years totaled $250,000 while your principal paid was just shy of $160,000.
If you include the taxes, insurance, and the maintenance, you’d likely reach a sum of around $50,000–$100,000 on top of your interest.
That’s nearly the entire value of your home, just calculating cash flow, in the first half of your mortgage.