Curly Wurly
Registered User
- Messages
- 19
Your house is fully paid off so you've got a ton of equity sitting there, would you consider mortgaging it & putting the funds from the released equity to work?
You mention 670k in savings, is this in cash or is it part in investments? I ask this because if it is in any kind of investment & you cash out & realize a profit during a year in which you are tax resident in Ireland then you are liable to CGT. Perhaps you can realize the profits from any investment before you become tax resident in Ireland.
Your house is fully paid off so you've got a ton of equity sitting there, would you consider mortgaging it & putting the funds from the released equity to work?
Don't leave this in cash, invest it put it to work. As of the moment, you're children will not have to pay full uni fees if they study in Ireland. 80,000 sounds like a lot but if you put it to work & it's growing & you don't spend it on Uni then no harm done.
Tell me your questions and I'll give you my answersFor the balance you need to provide us with a more detailed financial profile of your family unit. What is your appetite for risk?
When you say I should max my pension contributions, do you mean from my salary (I'll do this, that's a given), or do you mean I should invest several hundred thousand euros of my cash into a pension too? I'm fine with this, but I'd hate to not be able to access my own money for potentially years, in case I needed some of it. This is the main reason for considering the rental property. It would at the very least generate a monthly income and I would be paying for the apartment(s) with cash.
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