zander1983
Registered User
- Messages
- 17
I have savings of 165k. The house is costing 400k.
of 250k - roughly calculated on the salary I pay myself (65k),
I put some money into a side business (which hasn't paid off yet but I hope will).
I also inherited a farm and house worth about 1 million euro. The farm profit is low, roughly 10k per year (been investing money back into buildings and its mainly a hobby farm).
What you are proposing is to purchase two properties worth €700k.
You are limit to the central bank lending rules of 3.5x salary.
Lastly, if you have an SSAP and contribute everything from the company, instead you could split your contributions into AVCs (the limit of which depends on your age) and the rest from the company
What I've mainly experienced is that most mortgage advisors will lick their thumb and run it down your accounts until they see a salary figure and just take that amount. A lot of them don't understand the gross earnings of the company vs salary.
You can get lucky with an advisor/broker who understands it
Paddy takes a salary of €50k and leaves €40k cash in the company - how will the lender treat that?
Ann has built up cash in the company in previous years. She takes a salary of €120k and creates a loss of €30k. Will the lender give her 3 1/2 times the €120k?
Rent as a % of Property value in the US is 8.5%, in parts of Dublin its 18.5%.
Hi zander
1) That might work and you might quickly become a millionaire.
or
2) It might not work and you go bust and lose everything.
My advice would be to get rich slowly. It's not as exciting, but it's much more predictable.
Really?
Dublin city centre according to this https://www.numbeo.com/property-investment/country_result.jsp?country=IrelandLooking at the latest daft rental report would suggest yields in Dublin (and across the country) are in line with the US. I don't see anywhere offering 18% yields.
As already pointed out, that link suggests an average gross rental yield of 6.96% in Dublin city centre.Dublin city centre according to this https://www.numbeo.com/property-investment/country_result.jsp?country=Ireland
I see 18.25% under Price To Rent Ratio City Centre for Dublin. But to be honest I didnt do much research into this metric. I was desperate to find some metric that wasn't way below the US or the UK, so this one stood outI looked at that link and I see:
Gross rental yield:
city centre = 6.96%
outside of centre = 8.14%
I don't see a rental yield of 18.5%?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?