I presume what Joe Sod means is they can only be sold to investors for student accommodation and not for open residential lettings.Yes, my understanding is that the tax break is for 10 years, (these are now as rare as hens teeth!) and that they can be sold on the open market at any stage. JOESOD seems to be saying that it cannot be sold other than to 'investors who wish to buy in later'. This is what I do not understand.
Yes, my understanding is that the tax break is for 10 years, (these are now as rare as hens teeth!) and that they can be sold on the open market at any stage. JOESOD seems to be saying that it cannot be sold other than to 'investors who wish to buy in later'. This is what I do not understand.
my impression is that the refurbishment is done on the whole building every so often, but that if one appartment gets thrashed or has really bad students that break everthing in a particular appartment, the management company will pay for that. The only thing is there seems to be a few of them for sale now so they are not exactly snapped up immediately, you have to be a cash buyer. Therefore I think you need to be prepared to lock up your money for a long time, on the other hand though you are only locking away 60K not 250K etc that you would be by buying a conventional house.
Hi Joe Sod,
Is it possible for you to send a link to what you have in mind? The quoted net yield of 6.67% seems very attractive - is it genuinely attainable year or year?
Also, does anyone know of a decent research paper of the merits of different types of property ownership for the Irish investor?
I would bite your arm off for 6.7%. But I suspect continual repairs where students are not chased for the cost, would half your yield.
An estate where apartments are sold very quickly and where apartments come up rarely are signs of well managed places, as is the general look of the place.
Im thinking of buying one of these in Parchment Square in Cork next to CIT/Munster Technological University. Net rental income is E11,400 P/A after management fee which is E3700. Management company looks after everything so its hands off. This is on campus accommodation 3 minute walk to college and has been there for over 15 years. Seems to be well managed and I think its a good return. They have 100% occupancy except for last year during Covid.True but equally there appears to be several very well managed developments 15 years on..
Hi. I am also contemplating buying student accommodation, but in Limerick. Did you do it and if so, how are you getting on?Im thinking of buying one of these in Parchment Square in Cork next to CIT/Munster Technological University. Net rental income is E11,400 P/A after management fee which is E3700. Management company looks after everything so its hands off. This is on campus accommodation 3 minute walk to college and has been there for over 15 years. Seems to be well managed and I think its a good return. They have 100% occupancy except for last year during Covid.
PP is specific for these kinds of developments in terms of use.Why can't it be sold on the 'general property market'?
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