PaulHoughton
Registered User
- Messages
- 68
Based on the figures you've given I think the proposition is affordable. Rough figures suggest you've got €6,500 per month take home pay. €500,000 over 28 years at 5.75% would be €2,997 per month before tax relief.
Why Revenue? For a tax assessment or something? Is that valuation realistic and in line with actual market activity?assets are land, valued by the revenue at 350K in January 2008.
So thats 46% of net income going on a Mortgage!! Do it over a more sensible 20 years (costing you much less in the long run) and that would move to over 50% of your net income!!
I thinks that's a lot of your net income going on a mortgage.
Why Revenue? For a tax assessment or something? Is that valuation realistic and in line with actual market activity?
Or do like many people and start overpaying your mortgage every time you get a salary increase, in order to repay your mortgage early without restricting yourself to a 20 year term from the outset.
Yes for a tax assessment, I shopped around for valuations and the lowest I could get was 350K.Why Revenue? For a tax assessment or something? Is that valuation realistic and in line with actual market activity?
So, is the author of the above article wrong to say that "...banks are now returning to their old policies of 80 per cent mortgages of a maximum of three to four times income" ? I read this and thought, maybe I won't qualify for the amount I want any more...
Ya - but paying that over 30 years, then what is that in todays money?Based on figures from here:
http://www.jeacle.ie/mortgage/
a 500,000 mortgage over 30 years at 6% would result in a total repayment of 500,000 + 579,192.64 = 1,079,190.00.
which you have to earn after tax......
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