Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
#1
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Joined: Aug 2016
Posts: 27
Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
My husband has been asked to relocate to CT to work. We have a 13 and 19 year old and I need some help from you lovely lot.
I have been looking at Ridgefield and around Fairfield County as that's where he'll be based. Any tips or advise would be warmly received. I'm up for looking at all areas. Thanks in advance 🤗
I have been looking at Ridgefield and around Fairfield County as that's where he'll be based. Any tips or advise would be warmly received. I'm up for looking at all areas. Thanks in advance 🤗
#2
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
What visa type is your husband getting? Most likely an L-1A, or perhaps L-1B, either way your 19 year old would only get at L-2 which prohibits working for a dependent child, and he/she will age-out on their 21st birthday and have to leave unless they can qualify for their own visa. Unless your husband's employer has a written commitment to apply for green cards for you pretty much immediately after you arrive, you will put your 19 year old on a track to being "sent home" on their 21st birthday.
#3
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
My husband has been asked to relocate to CT to work. We have a 13 and 19 year old and I need some help from you lovely lot.
I have been looking at Ridgefield and around Fairfield County as that's where he'll be based. Any tips or advise would be warmly received. I'm up for looking at all areas. Thanks in advance 🤗
I have been looking at Ridgefield and around Fairfield County as that's where he'll be based. Any tips or advise would be warmly received. I'm up for looking at all areas. Thanks in advance 🤗
#4
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Joined: Aug 2016
Posts: 27
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
Thanks guys. That's all really helpful. We have a call with the solicitor on Friday re visas so will know more then.
I've been looking also at Bridgeport. Some schools are really poor and other are really highly ranked. They also have an international baccauleariate school there which I'm thinking might be better for my son as we are only out there for 3-5 years.
Also, you get a lot more house for your money. I know there must be a reason, especially as it's on the coast. Can anyone enlighten me please. Need as much info before September as we are flying over for a pre decision visit.
Thanks so much. 😊
I've been looking also at Bridgeport. Some schools are really poor and other are really highly ranked. They also have an international baccauleariate school there which I'm thinking might be better for my son as we are only out there for 3-5 years.
Also, you get a lot more house for your money. I know there must be a reason, especially as it's on the coast. Can anyone enlighten me please. Need as much info before September as we are flying over for a pre decision visit.
Thanks so much. 😊
#5
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
If you're only coming for 3-5 years, buying a house is likely to be an expensive proposition because the round trip costs of buying and selling are quite high - around 10% of the final selling price - the seller pays the "realtor" (estate agent) fee which is typically 6% and it is quite likely that house prices won't appreciate fast enough to cover the cost of selling. A neighbour of mine who lived in CT briefly (he is an IT contractor) complained that owning a home there, and selling after three years cost him $60,000!
Then owning a house is expensive too, for two reasons, firstly in CT (as in other states in New England and the North East) the property tax is much higher than in the UK. You could easily be facing a property tax bill of $6,000 a year, or more.
Then there are the costs of repairs and maintenance - repairs are a fact of life for American home owners in a way that is unexpected for a home owner from Britain. There just seems to be so much on an American home to go wrong or wear out - not least the roof, which typically only lasts around 20 years, and will cost probably $15,000-$20,000 to replace (metal roofs are becoming more popular, and last much longer), the heating and AC (not all homes in CT have AC) systems often don't even last as long as the roof, but cost about as much to replace. Other smaller issues with plumbing, the electrical system, doors, windows, and paint/ woodwork are just relentless.
I do a lot of the repairs and maintenance myself, even some that others would call a tradesman for - such as dealing with a plumbing leak one evening two weeks ago. Luckily I live close enough to a DIY store to get parts and I had the experience and the tools to fix it that evening. I sometimes joke that my house isn't just a home, it's a hobby too, except that thirteen years after we bought this house, the joke is wearing a bit thin.
Needless to say, if you rent a home, the property taxes and expected repairs and maintenance are rolled into the rent.
Then owning a house is expensive too, for two reasons, firstly in CT (as in other states in New England and the North East) the property tax is much higher than in the UK. You could easily be facing a property tax bill of $6,000 a year, or more.
Then there are the costs of repairs and maintenance - repairs are a fact of life for American home owners in a way that is unexpected for a home owner from Britain. There just seems to be so much on an American home to go wrong or wear out - not least the roof, which typically only lasts around 20 years, and will cost probably $15,000-$20,000 to replace (metal roofs are becoming more popular, and last much longer), the heating and AC (not all homes in CT have AC) systems often don't even last as long as the roof, but cost about as much to replace. Other smaller issues with plumbing, the electrical system, doors, windows, and paint/ woodwork are just relentless.
I do a lot of the repairs and maintenance myself, even some that others would call a tradesman for - such as dealing with a plumbing leak one evening two weeks ago. Luckily I live close enough to a DIY store to get parts and I had the experience and the tools to fix it that evening. I sometimes joke that my house isn't just a home, it's a hobby too, except that thirteen years after we bought this house, the joke is wearing a bit thin.
Needless to say, if you rent a home, the property taxes and expected repairs and maintenance are rolled into the rent.
Last edited by Pulaski; Aug 21st 2016 at 11:39 am.
#6
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
Thanks guys. That's all really helpful. We have a call with the solicitor on Friday re visas so will know more then.
I've been looking also at Bridgeport. Some schools are really poor and other are really highly ranked. They also have an international baccauleariate school there which I'm thinking might be better for my son as we are only out there for 3-5 years.
Also, you get a lot more house for your money. I know there must be a reason, especially as it's on the coast. Can anyone enlighten me please. Need as much info before September as we are flying over for a pre decision visit.
Thanks so much. 😊
I've been looking also at Bridgeport. Some schools are really poor and other are really highly ranked. They also have an international baccauleariate school there which I'm thinking might be better for my son as we are only out there for 3-5 years.
Also, you get a lot more house for your money. I know there must be a reason, especially as it's on the coast. Can anyone enlighten me please. Need as much info before September as we are flying over for a pre decision visit.
Thanks so much. 😊
#7
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
Trish,
Are you thinking the 19 year old will attend college? Make sure that's allowed on an L2. And if it is, keep in mind he will need an F1 visa to attend school in the USA after age 21.
Rene
Are you thinking the 19 year old will attend college? Make sure that's allowed on an L2. And if it is, keep in mind he will need an F1 visa to attend school in the USA after age 21.
Rene
#8
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Joined: Apr 2011
Location: Ohio
Posts: 1,834
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
OP, what is your 19 yr old doing now - studying, working? Whatever it is, does s/he really want to disrupt it, and potentially derail their early adulthood prospects for education/ career/ friends/ love life, just to move to the US on a very temporary basis?
#9
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
Thanks guys. That's all really helpful. We have a call with the solicitor on Friday re visas so will know more then.
I've been looking also at Bridgeport. Some schools are really poor and other are really highly ranked. They also have an international baccauleariate school there which I'm thinking might be better for my son as we are only out there for 3-5 years.
Also, you get a lot more house for your money. I know there must be a reason, especially as it's on the coast. Can anyone enlighten me please. Need as much info before September as we are flying over for a pre decision visit.
Thanks so much. 😊
I've been looking also at Bridgeport. Some schools are really poor and other are really highly ranked. They also have an international baccauleariate school there which I'm thinking might be better for my son as we are only out there for 3-5 years.
Also, you get a lot more house for your money. I know there must be a reason, especially as it's on the coast. Can anyone enlighten me please. Need as much info before September as we are flying over for a pre decision visit.
Thanks so much. 😊
Actually, you can safely double that number in the towns that I recommend.
#10
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
I thought $6K was extremely low. I would think for a 3/4 bedroomed house in a good area of the NE it would be more like three times that amount per year. We were paying a 5 figure sum in NJ. Home ownership is not as good an investment as it is in the UK.
#11
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
I thought that might be the case, but having never lived there, and it's been 14 years since I looked at buying there, I didn't want to overstate the number.
#12
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
I agree. Avoid Bridgeport at all costs! I have a relative in the bordering town of Fairfield, and even the Bridgeport side of Fairfield is iffy. The towns Nutmegger mentions are good, with consistently good schools.
#13
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Joined: Aug 2016
Posts: 27
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
This is all great info. I really appreciate it. Please keep it coming. I really want a good insight before we come for our pre decision visit on September 1st.
#14
Re: Moving to CT with a 13 and 19 year old
I had a pizza delivered to a residential address near Bridgeport hospital. The delivery driver phoned my number and requested that I come out to his car to collect it. Yup, avoid at all costs.