Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,706
As in can I sell my investment, purchase an ARF and would I be better off?
Not necessarily. Your point is true of DB pensions or annuities. There are many options to preserve wealth if you die.My understanding of the pension pot is that much of it disappears when you die
You're a bit of an exception!However I do not think property is risky in comparison with shares and nobody on here ever has convinced me of that. The reason is that what care I if property falls in value, it makes no difference to me, if rents go down, I've enough lee way to cover that, voids, enough to cover those, interest rates hikes, similar (BTW that doesn't apply when the mortgage is paid off)
For someone with a single property on retirement, no other assets, and no cash the risk is high. Even without a mortgage.
Conclusion 2
It is extremely risking relying on just one property as your source of income in retirement. Even if you own it outright without a mortgage. Rents can fall. You might find it difficult to get a tenant.
I agreeYou misunderstood me. I was pointing out where was the 300K paid from. The investor in a normal rental, one not bought outright, from PAYE income, the actual property is paid for by the rent. But a pension has to be purchased over a long time period from your actual work income.
Well Burgess and RedOnion don't seem to agree. I'm not sure how I'm to do the numbers that he wants though. The only person that's well able to do that is Cream Egg.I agree
The 300k is gradually paid down by the tenants
Everything is relative.Is that risky.
I'm not sure what I don't agree with?RedOnion don't seem to agree
I'm not against property as an investment
The 300k is gradually paid down by the tenants
Not only does it not "not mean anything"
It is very significant
How do you do it mathematically then? There must be a way to do it I guess. But I don't know how to do so.Express it mathematically when comparing it to a pension investment.
borrowing also magnifies the risks.
mortgage payments plus tax is usually greater than rental income, so there is a cost to the property owner while they have a mortgage.
On the point you didn't understand. I think it should be pointed out that an investment property can be purchases out of rent, whereas pension has to come out of PAYE income.
"the actual property is paid for by the rent. But a pension has to be purchase"
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?