Most people buy into the myth that buying a home is the best investment you can ever make...but more often than not that idea is just a myth.
Take the US as an example. The average house in N. America appreciates 5 to 6 per cent per year, which sounds great at first glance. In 10 years the value of your house will almost double.
But most people don't take into account the interest rate where the average homeowner is paying approx. 6% annual interest on a typical 30-year fixed mortgage.
So the interest alone is wiping out the gains on your annual 6% appreciation. On top of that you are paying 1% property tax year every year, maintenance and repair costs, etc.
Making matters worse is that for the first ten years or so most or all of your payments are applied to the interest, so you wont have any actual ownership or equity of the home,
or very little...for the first ten years. And consider that much of the appreciation of your house is simply due to inflation. So if inflation is 5% per year then that alone is undermining your actual appreciation.
I'm not saying that owning a house is a bad thing, there are certainly benefits to home ownership. It provides you with a place to live, you can borrow against it,
you can pass it down to your kids, etc. If you just want to have a place to live and call your own then owning a house may be a great idea for you, but don't think of it as some kind of
incredible financial investment because it is not as great as you may think.
The thing with housing is that is a special kind of asset. You need to live somewhere, and if you keep renting forever, you will probably have a hard time retiring.
Fiat money decreases its purchasing power over time of course, so that means that if you buy a home, you freeze the price of that asset at that point in time, so it gets cheaper and cheaper over time for you. Compared to that, if you keep renting, rent will continue to go up over time, because money is devalued.
So, in a way, buying one home seems to be a smart investment.
Whatever you do after that is open to personal preferences, Bitcoin, real estate, gold, etc.