Buying Your First House Isn’t a Luxury – It’s a Necessity

Luxury Is Perspective

Buying Your First House Isn’t a Luxury — It’s a Necessity

I had a conversation recently that completely reframed how I think about homeownership in Lagos.

Not with a first-time buyer.
Not with someone struggling to “make it.”

But with a big mummy — a seasoned, deeply spiritual, and highly successful entrepreneur in the real estate leasing space. A woman with over 10 properties already on lease. Someone who understands the Lagos market not from theory, but from years of lived experience and cash flow.

And yet, she said something that stuck with me:

“I’m looking for a 4 or 5-bedroom house… budget is around ₦400M.”

My first reaction?
This woman is not serious.

₦400M? For a personal house?
Why not just buy a clean duplex in Ajah for ₦70M–₦120M and call it a day?

In my head, that ₦400M screamed luxury.
But in her reality, it screamed necessity.


The Lagos Reality: Rent Will Quietly Drain You

She said something else that hit even harder:

“If you’re not careful, rent will finish all your savings and your growth.”

That’s not an exaggeration — it’s the Lagos truth.

Let’s break it down:

  • Annual rent in prime areas (Lekki, Ikoyi, VI) can range from ₦3M to ₦15M+

  • Add service charges, agency, legal, caution fees — you’re easily adding 20–30% extra

  • Every 1–2 years, you repeat the cycle

  • Meanwhile, inflation is rising and the naira is losing value

What happens?

You stay busy earning… but never really building.

Rent becomes a silent wealth killer.


The Illusion of Luxury

Here’s where things got even more interesting.

I started doing mental math:

  • She’s targeting a ₦400M home

  • She likely has at least ₦80M liquid

  • Her Lexus SUV alone is probably worth ₦50M+

And that’s when it clicked.

Luxury is relative.

What looks like an outrageous decision from one level…
is a completely logical move from another.

For me (and maybe for many people reading this):

  • ₦400M house = extreme luxury

For her:

  • ₦400M house = strategic asset, stability, long-term play

Same number. Completely different meaning.


There Are Levels to This Game

Real estate in Lagos is not just about having shelter.
It’s about:

  • Preserving wealth

  • Controlling your living costs long-term

  • Positioning yourself in the right environment

  • Escaping the rent cycle

At a certain level, continuing to rent is actually more expensive than owning.

And at an even higher level, the quality of the house you buy becomes just as important as owning itself.

That’s where I was wrong.

I was thinking:

“Why not just get a duplex in Ajah?”

But she was thinking:

  • Location prestige

  • Asset appreciation

  • Lifestyle alignment

  • Long-term comfort

  • Family structure

  • Social positioning

Different lenses entirely.


The Mindset Shift: From Consumption to Control

Buying your first house is often seen as:

  • A reward

  • A flex

  • A luxury milestone

But in reality, it’s none of those.

It’s control.

Control over:

  • Your housing costs

  • Your environment

  • Your long-term financial direction

That’s why she wasn’t hesitating.

Because she understood something many people don’t:

You don’t wait to “feel rich” before you buy a house.
You buy a house to stop leaking money and become financially stable.


So… Is ₦400M Really Too Much?

That depends on who you are in the game.

  • For a first-time buyer earning ₦300K/month? Unrealistic.

  • For a mid-level professional? A stretch.

  • For a real estate entrepreneur with multiple income streams? Strategic.

The danger is not in the number.

The danger is in:

  • Copying someone else’s level

  • Without understanding your own capacity


Final Thought: Redefining “Luxury”

We need to stop confusing price with purpose.

A house is not just:

  • Walls

  • Tiles

  • Aesthetic

It’s a financial decision. A life decision.

For some, luxury is:

  • Finally leaving rent

For others, luxury is:

  • Living in Ikoyi instead of Ajah

For a few, luxury is:

  • Owning multiple doors that pay them monthly

And for people like her?

Luxury is no longer the question.

Sustainability is.


If you’re reading this and still renting in Lagos, ask yourself:

At what point does rent stop making sense for you?

Because the truth is simple:

Your first house isn’t a luxury.
It’s your entry ticket into financial control

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