Brendan Burgess
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Sarenco also has a Key Post on this thread here:
A typical question
I have a house worth €300k on which I have an €80k mortgage.
I have €100k on deposit and I am borrowing €500k to buy a house for €600k.
I don’t need to sell my old house. Should I keep it as an investment?
If you don’t sell your house…
House values|€900k
Mortages|€580k
Equity|320k
If you sell your old house and pay off the loan
house value|600k
mortgage|280k
equity|320k
Look at it as a separate investment decision…
If you owned a house worth €600k with a mortgage of €280k, do you think that borrowing €300k to buy an investment property would be a good idea?
Evaluate this like any other borrow to invest decision.
What is your view of medium and long term property prices?
What is the rental yield on the property?
Does the rent less expenses cover the interest on the loan?
A common mistake which people make is as follows:
I can get rent of €800 a month.
The repayments on my €80k mortgage are only €100 a month.
So I am making a profit of €700 a month.
If you sell the house, you can pay €220k off your mortgage, so you will save interest on €300k. You must compare the rental income with the cost of borrowing €300k.
If the new mortgage is costing you 4%, then the real cost of keeping the property is €12,000 per year or €1,000 per month.
What are the risks?
You may find it difficult to rent out the house.
You may get a difficult tenant who doesn’t pay rent and wrecks the house.
House prices may fall.
Interest rates may rise.
Or you might be unlucky enough to get hit by all 4 of these factors
Are you comfortable with the level of borrowing?
Borrowing to invest is risky.
You have to be able to handle the repayments on the loan if the income from the investment is not as good as you had planned.
What happens if you lose your job?
Having such high borrowings restricts your capacity to borrow more. If you have borrowings of €280k on a house worth €600k, and you need to borrow for something else, the banks will be far more likely to lend to you than if you have €580k worth of borrowings. You might need to borrow in the future to fund a career break, to build an extension or to buy a holiday home. Having a low level of borrowings is a great place to be.
A €600k exposure to the property market is enough for most people
If house prices rise over the medium or longer term, you will benefit anyway from the increase in value of your home. The additional return on the €300k might not be worth the risk.
If you are prepared to borrow to invest, are there better investment options?
It is more tax efficient to invest in your pension. If you are not maximising your pension contributions, you should consider doing so.
Income Tax consequences of retaining your home as an investment
Let’s say that the rental income is €800 per month| €9,000
The interest paid will be say 5% of €80k or €4,000
You can claim tax relief on only 75% of this| €3,000
So your taxable income will be |€6,000
Assuming a 50% tax rate|€3,000
Although you should view yourself as having a €300,000 mortgage, you can only claim tax relief on the existing mortgage. So the profit and loss could well be
Rental income|€9,000
Interest @5% of €300,000|15,000
Tax|€3,000
Loss|€9,000
Stamp duty clawback
If you got First Time Buyer's relief when you bought your house and you sell within 5 years (check), you will have to pay stamp duty.
Capital Gains Tax consequences of retaining your existing home as an investment
Any capital gain on your home is tax free. So let’s say he bought it for €200k ten years ago. You have a tax-free capital gain of €100k.
Now let’s say that you hold it for a further ten years and sell it for its current value of €300k. Revenue will split the gain over the 20 years and so half the gain or €50k will be subject to CGT at 25%. So, lthough you will have no real gain for the next ten years, you will end up with a Capital Gains Tax bill.
If you are prepared to invest €900k in property, consider trading up to a €900k home
You will have a much nicer house.
Any gain will be exempt from CGT.
This would make particular sense if you are planning to trade up again in the next ten years. Trading up higher than planned now will save you a lot in stamp duty and transaction costs.
The big downside of this is that if things get tough financially, you can’t sell your €300k investment.
Lifestyle and other issues
Managing a property is work. If you enjoy this type of work and have the time for it, this won't be a problem. But if you have a busy life, you may not have the time for managing your property and it will suffer.
There are also hassles with the PTRB and making tax returns.
This is an update of this thread from 2004
Key Post - Keep property as Rental or Sell?
Updated May 2020 The question regularly comes up on AAM whether somebody should keep an apartment that their family has outgrown as a rental or whether they should just sell up. Borrowers often run projections on the anticipated rental income from an apartment with a cheap tracker and conclude...
www.askaboutmoney.com
A typical question
I have a house worth €300k on which I have an €80k mortgage.
I have €100k on deposit and I am borrowing €500k to buy a house for €600k.
I don’t need to sell my old house. Should I keep it as an investment?
If you don’t sell your house…
House values|€900k
Mortages|€580k
Equity|320k
If you sell your old house and pay off the loan
house value|600k
mortgage|280k
equity|320k
Look at it as a separate investment decision…
If you owned a house worth €600k with a mortgage of €280k, do you think that borrowing €300k to buy an investment property would be a good idea?
Evaluate this like any other borrow to invest decision.
What is your view of medium and long term property prices?
What is the rental yield on the property?
Does the rent less expenses cover the interest on the loan?
A common mistake which people make is as follows:
I can get rent of €800 a month.
The repayments on my €80k mortgage are only €100 a month.
So I am making a profit of €700 a month.
If you sell the house, you can pay €220k off your mortgage, so you will save interest on €300k. You must compare the rental income with the cost of borrowing €300k.
If the new mortgage is costing you 4%, then the real cost of keeping the property is €12,000 per year or €1,000 per month.
What are the risks?
You may find it difficult to rent out the house.
You may get a difficult tenant who doesn’t pay rent and wrecks the house.
House prices may fall.
Interest rates may rise.
Or you might be unlucky enough to get hit by all 4 of these factors
Are you comfortable with the level of borrowing?
Borrowing to invest is risky.
You have to be able to handle the repayments on the loan if the income from the investment is not as good as you had planned.
What happens if you lose your job?
Having such high borrowings restricts your capacity to borrow more. If you have borrowings of €280k on a house worth €600k, and you need to borrow for something else, the banks will be far more likely to lend to you than if you have €580k worth of borrowings. You might need to borrow in the future to fund a career break, to build an extension or to buy a holiday home. Having a low level of borrowings is a great place to be.
A €600k exposure to the property market is enough for most people
If house prices rise over the medium or longer term, you will benefit anyway from the increase in value of your home. The additional return on the €300k might not be worth the risk.
If you are prepared to borrow to invest, are there better investment options?
It is more tax efficient to invest in your pension. If you are not maximising your pension contributions, you should consider doing so.
Income Tax consequences of retaining your home as an investment
Let’s say that the rental income is €800 per month| €9,000
The interest paid will be say 5% of €80k or €4,000
You can claim tax relief on only 75% of this| €3,000
So your taxable income will be |€6,000
Assuming a 50% tax rate|€3,000
Although you should view yourself as having a €300,000 mortgage, you can only claim tax relief on the existing mortgage. So the profit and loss could well be
Rental income|€9,000
Interest @5% of €300,000|15,000
Tax|€3,000
Loss|€9,000
Stamp duty clawback
If you got First Time Buyer's relief when you bought your house and you sell within 5 years (check), you will have to pay stamp duty.
Capital Gains Tax consequences of retaining your existing home as an investment
Any capital gain on your home is tax free. So let’s say he bought it for €200k ten years ago. You have a tax-free capital gain of €100k.
Now let’s say that you hold it for a further ten years and sell it for its current value of €300k. Revenue will split the gain over the 20 years and so half the gain or €50k will be subject to CGT at 25%. So, lthough you will have no real gain for the next ten years, you will end up with a Capital Gains Tax bill.
If you are prepared to invest €900k in property, consider trading up to a €900k home
You will have a much nicer house.
Any gain will be exempt from CGT.
This would make particular sense if you are planning to trade up again in the next ten years. Trading up higher than planned now will save you a lot in stamp duty and transaction costs.
The big downside of this is that if things get tough financially, you can’t sell your €300k investment.
Lifestyle and other issues
Managing a property is work. If you enjoy this type of work and have the time for it, this won't be a problem. But if you have a busy life, you may not have the time for managing your property and it will suffer.
There are also hassles with the PTRB and making tax returns.
This is an update of this thread from 2004
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