coolaboola12
Registered User
- Messages
- 318
You are obviously doing fine financially but if I was in your shoes, I would sell the rental property and use the net proceeds to pay down the mortgage on your PPR (leaving the term the same). The (after-tax) net yield on the rental simply isn't high enough (IMO) to justify a financing rate of 3.15%.
I would then use the freed up cash-flow to increase your pension contributions to 20% of your gross annual income - 25% in the year that you hit 40.
I would nudge up the cash reserve slightly, maybe to €30k. I would then use any after-tax savings, over and above that €30k figure, to pay down the PPR mortgage.
Hope that helps.
I don't think that's really the right way to look at it.The way i was looking at the rental is that for roughly 4000 per year (top up and some maintenance) we own an asset where the mortgage is reducing 6k per year and "possibly" appreciating also in value
Is that rental income after tax?
Which means your net rental profit is only around €2-4k, €1-2k after tax. That's a very slim return for the considerable risks you are bearing, never mind the hassle.Tax has been around 1000-2000 per year
Is your income likely to increase in the coming years? If so id be tempted to keep the property and use any increases in income to max fund pension contributions, increase reserves and pay down debt. If you sell the property now and pay down debt etc and then your income increases you will be looking at surplus cash in the future which will more than likely be spent on lifestyle increases.
The reason I like the property is that it is an income generating asset and could be very valuable to you in retirement.
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