Dave Byrne
Registered User
- Messages
- 41
(I'm PAYE but have rental income)
- should and ARF perform as well as a (ex-employee) pension?
You borrowed (to pay your tax bill?) last year and you're in the same position again of having to borrow or tap into your pension to pay your tax bill later this year? This doesn't sound sustainable. @Brendan Burgess's advice above seems appropriate:So last week I got my accountant to draft my 2024 tax returns (I'm PAYE but have rental income) and wondered how I was going to put aside another 12k this year to pay my tax bill in Oct (with my spanking new mortgage in place).
Is the rental property isn't even covering the tax liabilities then it's a bad investment. Even if it is it may still be an inappropriate investment for your needs/situation.Sell the rental.
Pay off your mortgages and loans.
Max your pension contributions every year from now until you retire.
Between your home and this investment property you seem to be very concentrated in one asset class and geographic region which is an arguably unnecessarily risky investment strategy. I don't know if you have other investments apart from your pension but if you had then presumably you could liquidate some of them to pay your tax bill. Seems to me that holding an investment property may not be the most appropriate investment for your specific situation and needs.As a stand alone investment, the rental property is a positive investment factoring in rent less tax plus capital appreciation so I don't have an appetite to sell that.
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