Teacher quits job, moves into van after mortgage shock - realestate.com.au


Teacher quits job, moves into van after mortgage shock - realestate.com.au

What do you do when the dream of owning your first home feels impossible?

For Sophie Vallis, the answer was radical: she quit her job, gave up on buying a house, and moved into a van.

The 28-year-old former UK teacher had spent years saving half her salary, determined to buy a modest two-bedroom home.

But when her bank offered her a mortgage of just $102,316 (£50,000) - barely enough to buy a shed - Vallis decided to rewrite her story.

Instead of pouring her savings into a housing market she felt was stacked against her, she bought a van, left her teaching career behind, and hit the road.

Her unconventional choice has now gone viral, with her TikTok account (@vanlifevallis) racking up thousands of views.

Her story is resonating, in particular, with young people around the world, including Australians struggling with skyrocketing property prices and stagnant wages.

"I was a teacher for three years and before that, I just worked since I was 16, maybe 15," Vallis explains to her followers.

"Growing up, we didn't have a lot of money so in my mind, the route to being secure...came from having a lot of money in the bank. And the big, big aim here was always to buy a house.

"In my first year of teaching, I was on $49,000 (£24,000) and I made it my effort to put away 50 per cent of what I earned. I applied for a mortgage...and they offered me something like $102,316 (£50,000).

"So they offered me two times what I earned (but) I anticipated four, four-and-a-half, five-times what I earned and which is what most people say (they got).

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"So I thought to myself, I'm spending my whole life living for tomorrow and I'm literally spending my whole life saving up and not doing what I want to do because I care about what might happen."

Using her savings, Vallis instead purchased and converted a van into a cosy mobile home.

She now spends her days travelling the UK, documenting her adventures online and encouraging others to rethink what success looks like.

"I carried on saving because at that point I really wanted to travel in a van," she said.

"I'm someone who has always been into non-traditional living and I was saving for tiny homes since I was 14 and I've always admired houseboats.

"When the van life kind of started coming up I just thought, that's it. That's it for me."

Her videos are filled with practical advice for those considering a similar lifestyle, from trialling off-grid living to saving for the transition.

But Vallis's story isn't just about van life - it's about challenging the idea that owning a home is the only path to happiness.

Her bold move has struck a nerve with young people everywhere, particularly those who feel locked out of the property market.

"A house isn't everything, we've all been missold the idea of you must go to school, get a job. Get a mortgage. Pay double the house cost to a bank which you'll never see again," one person commented on one of the videos.

"Wish I'd done this at your age," another wrote.

While Sophie's savings are currently funding her travels, she knows the money won't last forever.

"Once it runs out, I'll go home, work, and save again," she said.

"Maybe I'll teach abroad to earn more in a shorter time. But for now, I'm living my dream."

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