Limited knowledge of using money effectively would like support.

BlackE

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I am 40 yrs old and moved to Ireland in 2017. This forum has opened my eyes about money management and how limited my knowledge about it is.

I wanted advice around my situation to maximise output.

Marital status - single.
No children
No credit cards/loans/mortage.

Current cash- 330,000
Pension- HSE (default) 40% tax bracket
Income- 80,000/pa
Saving: 2000/mo
Expenses: 1500-1700 (including rent)/mo
Other expenses- holidays x 2 per year

Currently I am fixed on buying a property in Ireland as primary residence and after some hiccups with mortgage approval resorted to consider cash buying.

However learning from some other threads I am now reconsidering investing all the money in property.

I would appreciate your thoughts about how to make the most of my situation.
 
Well you have enough current cash and would save going forward on monthly rent so why not be a cash buyer for a property ? Makes sense to me. Maybe hold a small cash reserve of €10K as a rainy day fund but you could certainly afford a property worth €320K which would give you security of tenure and a place to live without having to rent. With recent reports saying Ireland needs to build 90K housing units per year until the end of the decade and we are currently building just north of 30K there is a very minimal chance of your property value falling so it's a good punt. Presumably you have some kind of civil service pension from the HSE so if that is sufficient then what else are you saving for ?
 
If you are a public servant on 80k, with a large amount of cash on deposit, how did you not get mortgage approval?
 
I think you're misunderstanding the advice. Sometimes people have a home, then have some cash and want to invest in property - as in, buy another one to rent. In that instance many would recommend investing in something else. But I think everyone would agree buying a home for yourself is a good idea.
 
You need somewhere to live; buy a home first.

Be aware under Money Laundering legislation your solicitor will request provenance of your cash payment.

Not suggesting there's anything untoward, but if you need letters / documentation from overseas, start getting that in order.
 
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