harmlessdonkey
Registered User
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- 17
Harmlessdonkey,Age: 36
Spouse’s/Partner's age: N/A
Annual gross income from employment or profession: 110K
Annual gross income of spouse: N.A
Monthly take-home pay 5k
Type of employment: e.g. Civil Servant, self-employed: Full-time private sector
In general are you:
(a) spending more than you earn, or
(b) saving?
In general, I am saving. I did have saving goals and started a small rainy day fund, but I have since decided that I want buy a house as my landlord will end the lease when level 5 is over. So I have diverted the 15k I have saved to a be a deposit for a house. I have got 30k from HTB scheme also if I buy a new house this year. I will also move back to my parents for a few months rather than rent a new place. So I will save 2.5k per month for a deposit and new home expenses.
Rough estimate of value of home N/A
Amount outstanding on your mortgage: N/A
What interest rate are you paying? N/A
Other borrowings – car loans/personal loans etc
Car loan 530 per month. 2 years left then the car is fully paid for (171) I intend to keep it for a few more years after that and keep saving the €530 as if I was still paying the loan.
Do you pay off your full credit card balance each month? Yes
If not, what is the balance on your credit card?
Savings and investments: As mentioned above 15k for home deposit.
Do you have a pension scheme? Yes. Although I think I would like to contribute more
Do you own any investment or other property? No
Ages of children: N/A
Life insurance: I have 4x salary from employer but none privately. I expect I will need Life Insurance or Mortgage protection for the house.
My goal is really to buy a house in the short term.
Then I would like to make sure I am providing enough for retirement as I am very concerned about being broke when I am 65. I don't plan to retire early, but I want to retire at 65. I have 70k in the pension pot so far and I am only adding 5% matached by employer 5% per month.
That sounds like a terrible idea.6) If it's over €400k, you might consider joining forces with a friend to buy a house jointly. For example, you might have a friend who has the deposit, but not the earnings. If you go down this avenue, set a 5 year deadline to sell the house, so you can go your separate ways.
The OP seems to be pinning their hopes on the enhanced help to buy scheme, which will provide 30k towards deposit if they buy a qualifying property before the scheme runs out.But to buy a house for €400k, you will need a €40k deposit. So you need to save €3k a month for just over a year.
I would recommend against.6) If it's over €400k, you might consider joining forces with a friend to buy a house jointly. For example, you might have a friend who has the deposit, but not the earnings. If you go down this avenue, set a 5 year deadline to sell the house, so you can go your separate ways.
I would recommend against.
Mortgage protection and life assurance are the same thing. Just a mortgage protection policy, typically, is set up to reduce in line with the projected mortgage balance. It works out cheaper to have a 396k policy, reducing to 0 over 30 years than providing for to full amount for the full term.I think I'll need mortgage protection insurance (is this better in my circumstances than a life policy)
The way I look at this is if you get a specific illness (it must be in the list provided by the insurer) that will most likely kill you, but not straight away, it'll pay a lump sum. in my view, the cover is expensive and the list if covered illnesses is always reducing for new policies. I think income protection is more important, which you already have through work.I also see there's an option of defined illness cover, is this worth it and what quantum of cover would you consider if you were in my shoes
It's probably sufficient if you've no family. Just check for yourself if the 66% is in addition to social welfare illness benefit, or if they reduce payment to account for it.is employer income protection of 66% sufficient
Actually, if you've already got proper mortgage approval with the car loan, I'd hold off paying it down quickly. But that depends on which lender it's with and if they asked about your existing loans. Getting your deposit together is more important.I'll take on-board the advice to pay down the car loan faster.
Thanks, yeah I suppose I was thinking do I need extra life cover beyond just to cover the house? I don't think so, but if circumstances change would it have been cheaper to get it now when I am relatively young and healthy. Probably not.Mortgage protection and life assurance are the same thing. Just a mortgage protection policy, typically, is set up to reduce in line with the projected mortgage balance. It works out cheaper to have a 396k policy, reducing to 0 over 30 years than providing for to full amount for the full term.
Thanks.The way I look at this is if you get a specific illness (it must be in the list provided by the insurer) that will most likely kill you, but not straight away, it'll pay a lump sum. in my view, the cover is expensive and the list if covered illnesses is always reducing for new policies. I think income protection is more important, which you already have through work.
Thanks, I'll look into that.It's probably sufficient if you've no family. Just check for yourself if the 66% is in addition to social welfare illness benefit, or if they reduce payment to account for it.
Yeah, I have full mortgage approval with the car loan declared. Car loan is with UB so depending on their exit schedule the loan might be sold or paid off by the time they exit.Actually, if you've already got proper mortgage approval with the car loan, I'd hold off paying it down quickly. But that depends on which lender it's with and if they asked about your existing loans. Getting your deposit together is more important.
Well, if you think about it, life assurance will only pay out when you die. At that stage you, personally, shouldn't have a use for the money!Thanks, yeah I suppose I was thinking do I need extra life cover beyond just to cover the house?
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