Agreed - its also possible that far more extreme rent controls could have been introduced by then, and he could even be faced with a scenario where there are set rents for his property type, potentially even less than he is getting right now.Not a good idea as he sacrifices €6,500 a year net for two years or €13,000 up front.
After two years, the legislation may well be changed and he could be stuck with charging the same rent.
After two years, rents may have fallen so he might not be getting more than €1,300 a month.
If he is still unhappy in two years, he can sell the apartment and buy another one which has not been let and charge market rent. Or he can do that now or just exit the market as many landlords are doing.
Sinn Féin is proposing to require landlords who want to sell to be forced to sell with the tenants still there. So it is probably time to get out anyway.
Brendan
SF don't need to do this - its already a practice respected by anybody who inherits a tenancy from a deceased relative. The tenant themselves will be very quick to rush to RTB and make a claim. This is already the case, and that was brought in under an FG government and reinforced under the current coalition.Thanks Brendan. Good synopsis. His landlord friend is quite adamant that vacating the property is the only way to go. I thought with 2% pa he might catch up a bit eventually. I suppose he could also sell and buy back in. Would cost him at least 10k between auctioneers fees, stamp duty and moving furniture. Would be hassle. The upside being that rents aren’t likely to fall in the near term. But they could ?
How likely are SF to enforce sales with in situ tenants ? Is it against owners rights ? Would devalue many properties esp those with low rents.