There are two sides to this equation. On one side is your contribution to keeping the house. On the other is the amount you are paying off the capital each year. I think Brendan's point is that as long as the capital reduces by more than your contribution then it is profitable.
It might be hard to see it like that at the moment but if you sell and have to repay that €80000 at a high rate per month for years with no asset at the end, then that is a bad idea. How much would you save per month? And would it really be worth it.
Yes, you're caught between a rock and a hard place at this moment in time. But only at this moment in time. Investing in property, shares, a savings account takes money from today to have tomorrow. In three years time your investment will look very different.
You are entitled to charge a market rate rent by the way. You are not a charity and eventually the government will have to pay the going rate for housing social welfare tenants. It's not your job to make up that shortfall.
It might be hard to see it like that at the moment but if you sell and have to repay that €80000 at a high rate per month for years with no asset at the end, then that is a bad idea. How much would you save per month? And would it really be worth it.
Yes, you're caught between a rock and a hard place at this moment in time. But only at this moment in time. Investing in property, shares, a savings account takes money from today to have tomorrow. In three years time your investment will look very different.
You are entitled to charge a market rate rent by the way. You are not a charity and eventually the government will have to pay the going rate for housing social welfare tenants. It's not your job to make up that shortfall.