Seems like a very low savings figure for such a high household income?Married couple, 44 years old, 2 kids, 4 and 8 years old. Combined income of 210k
Savings of approx 50k.
Impossible to say without some indication of the possible second house purchase price.I’d like to look at options of retaining current house and renting out, and obtaining a 2nd mortgage for new house. Is this feasible?
Thanks, I was hoping for some magic wand equity release possibility.You don't seem to have enough cash deposit to buy a larger house.
50k deposit means a 500k house, yet your current house is worth more.
If the proposed house is 600k, that means 60k deposit.
Thanks Clubman,Buying a second property would be concentrating risk for most of your net worth in a single asset class/geographic region and, as such, probably not the best idea.
Buying a property because you're "not great with investments" isn't really a good reason.
As I said, a Money Makeover would probably be a good way to get more specific/targeted feedback.
But if you don't want to do that then there are loads of existing threads on different investment options and why concentrating risk in one asset class isn't generally a good idea.
Yes its a 2bed, with another room that could be converted to a 3rd bedroom on the GF, Last valuation was for 515k in 2020.What is the price of your target property? And have you had your house valued recently? That seems low for D14 unless it's a 2 bed?
Ok, I didn't realise this.Thanks Clubman,
I had started a Money Makeover thread previously, I may resurrect it.
Not on the full gain, only a portion of it.If you don't sell within a year of buying the new house you will have to pay capital gains tax at 33% on the gain.
And the portion rises every year no matter what way house prices go.Not on the full gain, only a portion of it.
Thanks for this, yes, all big questions, and ones we will work on. Part of the concern is the type of house you are getting for 600-700k. One of our jobs is secure, the other, main income is stable for the next month anyway!On the move out of Dublin. What is your target price there and how realistic is you both keeping current jobs and salary levels if so? Are your employers rock solid for yhr next 15 years (whose is!) or government and if required more in office would this be feasible ?
Have you priced conversion of ground floor room or attic or extension? Unlikely you'd get what you need for less than moving though but worth getting ball park idea just to rule it out.
On moving schools. At aged 8 your older child could potentially cope with a change. You're obviously considering i6 anyway by considering moving out of Dublin.
I guess what I am saying is look at your options, considering what you would gain in each scenario (larger house, closer to family, stay in current community) v what it will cost you to choose that option, considering money, impact on kids, logistics eg if you have to sell to buy how will you do this, or if moving out of Dublin maybe you don't need to.
Was the original purchase date mentioned somewhere?And the portion rises every year no matter what way house prices go.
My guess is the OP has had a very good gain over the past few years which is currently tax free.
If he rents it til 2030 and then sells it, 30% of the gain til then is subject to cgt even if the price drops
If he rents until 2035, the % goes to 50% subject to cgt.
Original Purchase price circa 360KWas the original purchase date mentioned somewhere?
Thread Updated!Once again, I think that the best approach here is to update the earlier Money Makeover so that people can comment based on a more holistic overview of your finances and circumstances. Otherwise, as is happening here, it's all bits and pieces without full context.
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