DublinHead54
Registered User
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- 1,092
Buying property at 2/3 the market price is the easy bit Brendan. So is selling a south Dublin home for a cheaper one in another part of the country.There are two separate issues here. And first, let's look at them separately.
Great idea. You have a home in which you would prefer to live. It's a lifestyle change which is to be commended assuming you have the income to support it.
I assume you have thought of schools, work, business etc. Assuming this all works out, then go for it.
The uni bit is a distraction. Forget about it for the moment. Does this investment stand up on its own merits. You have €700k. Should you invest €400k of it to buy a property worth €600k?
Yes, I think you should. If I were offered a property worth €600k for €400k, would I buy it? Yes, I would although I don't like property investment. If I got tired of the investment, I would sell it off and if house prices don't fall by more than 20%, I will be back to square one. (I am assuming you will have a CAT bill on the purchase.)
Has the property got a tenant? If it has, then you will be unable to charge market rent for it. Just in case that is the reason for the discount. If it has a tenant at a discounted rent, I wouldn't touch it.
I would still sell your current house if it stacks up and invest the proceeds in a diverse portfolio of shares.
Brendan
The assets jump out at me for a 40 year old and a 34 year old.Buying property at 2/3 the market price is the easy bit Brendan. So is selling a south Dublin home for a cheaper one in another part of the country.
It's the parts that you assume have been thought of that are raising all the questions. The OP and his wife are giving up well paying jobs. What will they do for income?
We have seen some detail on being a landlord but even those figures seem optimistic as they don't seem to account for periods of vacancy and refurbishment costs as well as other costs of being a landlord, just rent = income.
- Be professional landlords
- Start a business
- Work part time
Zero detail on what a new business would look like or what part time work they will have.
Effectively retiring at 40 or 34 for the spouse is the stuff of FIRE people. The assets the OP has accumulated so far aren't jumping out at me. I regularly do work for clients who are in much better position financially but are not contemplating giving up work at that age.
Steven
http://www.bluewaterfp.ie (www.bluewaterfp.ie)
They are rich but not wealthy and then don't forget to factor in the two kid's!!I sometimes feel people lose perspective here a little. If they are not wealthy given their ages then the rest of us are in big trouble!
There are two separate issues here. And first, let's look at them separately.
Great idea. You have a home in which you would prefer to live. It's a lifestyle change which is to be commended assuming you have the income to support it.
I assume you have thought of schools, work, business etc. Assuming this all works out, then go for it.
The uni bit is a distraction. Forget about it for the moment. Does this investment stand up on its own merits. You have €700k. Should you invest €400k of it to buy a property worth €600k?
Yes, I think you should. If I were offered a property worth €600k for €400k, would I buy it? Yes, I would although I don't like property investment. If I got tired of the investment, I would sell it off and if house prices don't fall by more than 20%, I will be back to square one. (I am assuming you will have a CAT bill on the purchase.)
Has the property got a tenant? If it has, then you will be unable to charge market rent for it. Just in case that is the reason for the discount. If it has a tenant at a discounted rent, I wouldn't touch it.
I would still sell your current house if it stacks up and invest the proceeds in a diverse portfolio of shares.
Brendan
Buying property at 2/3 the market price is the easy bit Brendan. So is selling a south Dublin home for a cheaper one in another part of the country.
It's the parts that you assume have been thought of that are raising all the questions. The OP and his wife are giving up well paying jobs. What will they do for income?
- Be professional landlords
- Start a business
- Work part time
We have seen some detail on being a landlord but even those figures seem optimistic as they don't seem to account for periods of vacancy and refurbishment costs as well as other costs of being a landlord, just rent = income.
Zero detail on what a new business would look like or what part time work they will have.
Effectively retiring at 40 or 34 for the spouse is the stuff of FIRE people. The assets the OP has accumulated so far aren't jumping out at me. I regularly do work for clients who are in much better position financially but are not contemplating giving up work at that age.
They are rich but not wealthy and then don't forget to factor in the two kid's!!
20% tax is sadly a pipedream. It will be closer to 30% as long as rental income remains subject to USC and PRSI.
- Rental Income 30k (2500 pcm)
- Costs
- Property Tax - 525
- Apartment Management fees - 1900
- RTB Registration - 90
- Property Management / Tenant Finder 10% - 3,000
- Accountant - 750
- Insurance - 250
- Misc Costs - 500
- Tax @20% = 4600
- Net = 18,385 / Net Yield 4.5% (3% against 600k valuation)
Aren't the costs of goods the same across the country? I wouldn't expect there to material cost of living differences across Ireland when you exclude housing in your case.
I recently sold a 2 bed apartment in a really popular area and development in D4, I did not achieve 550-600k and others that sold in the last year did not either. Maybe in the last quarter things have further increase, however my main driver was that the in the second half of 2021 I found rents reducing in the area and yields dropping.
Your real yield is likely to be closer to 3% and you'll only net ~18k per year from the property in your pocket.
- Rental Income 30k (2500 pcm)
- Costs
- Property Tax - 525
- Apartment Management fees - 1900
- RTB Registration - 90
- Property Management / Tenant Finder 10% - 3,000
- Accountant - 750
- Insurance - 250
- Misc Costs - 500
- Tax @20% = 4600
- Net = 18,385 / Net Yield 4.5% (3% against 600k valuation)
You are in a very envious position. Most of us, if we are lucky, have between 60-80 years on this planet - between school and work, how much of it do we spend on our own ticket. Mine, and a lot of my friends parents never made it to retirement, or if they did, they were in absolute tatters from a long life of work and have no energy, health or will left to enjoy it.
Go for it, and make the most of it - 4k a month with no mortgage is a great position that very few people would ever find themselves in. Worst case scenario, you can just get a job when you need to... if I had your assets, my main goal would be to use it to reduce my stress and working hours as much as I could, otherwise, what's the point of the luck that has come your way.
4k a month debt free would definitely provide a very adequate lifestyle.
Comes's down to what is best from a lifestyle point of veiw for your family
Costs for groceries etc can be for sure. There's definitely a big difference in costs associated with eating out etc.
Oh wow so you sold up? Would you not be interested in doing the tenant finding yourself? Or has experience taught you otherwise? I guess you'd want the right people in on a multi year contract ideally. Thanks for the breakdown.
I think you are in a great position financially. Assets of 1.18M. I would sell and make the move to the country. Your transport costs will go up but your other costs should go down, commuting, dressing up for the job, eating out, groceries. Sending you kids back to Dublin for secondary is not something I would consider, mainly because I want to be the main influence on my children, not a boarding school.
You have done what others have being saying on here, focus on reducing your mortgage and then concentrate on a pension. If you or your spouse can move to remote work then that would allow an easy transition to the country while maintaining income levels.
Once you move and have that €4K per month income then focus on pension growth. I would put that before saving for school or university for the kids.
I think you are emotionally attached to the area of Dublin where the apartment is and it is preventing you from doing what Brendan suggests. Either buy for €400K and then flip, or else take the €200K as a gift. Your kids may never go to college in Dublin, so be happy if they do but otherwise let them make their own path in life.
Thanks for this. What makes you say that?
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