Ernest
Stupid IDIOT
Buy to let are scum of the earth and should be taxed out of business
Scum.
As somebody who is early 30s has a solid professional career and cannot imagine buying a house without a bunse from somewhere (which coming from a working class family is not going to happen) very valuable.
Indeed.Blame the politicians and regulators for this situation
Indeed.
We need to question the ludicrous Coalition propaganda that claims that the new rules that allow folk to convert their pension pots into a lump sum will be a good thing. The effect can only be further distortions of the housing market, combined with widespread personal tragedies arising from the collapse of the pension system.
Happy New Year All
I've thought about going down the buy-to-let route for some time now and, if brave enough, will make 2015 the year I commit!
Throughout the normal course of life, I've bought and sold properties (sole residences that I've lived in) and am now in the fortunate position of having a sizable amount of equity.
Rather than ploughing it all back into another residential property, I'm considering downsizing my residential property and using most of the equity to purchase a flat to rent out. (I'd still need some of the equity as a deposit on the residential property which would have to be mortgaged.)
As a beginner landlord, I would use a letting agency to manage the tenants etc. How astronomical are their fees?
I don't have a very high risk appetite; I've worked too hard for too long to risk losing it all now, so I'd want to play it as safe as possible, i.e. flat near Brighton station. But I'm petrified that tenants will trash the place and I'll end up spending any profit on repairs, or worse, end up in debt.
I'd still be working so looking to do this as a sideline to boost my woefully inadequate pension fund!
I do have an appointment with an IFA next week to discuss financials, but just thought I'd try and get some personal experiences, both good and bad, from the wise owls of NSC. Would you recommend it? Have you done and wished you hadn't?
So please share your thoughts, by PM if preferred. I would appreciate it.
Many thanks in advance.
Buy to let are scum of the earth and should be taxed out of business
Be extremely discriminatory. You'll be seeking employed, white, mid twenties to early 30 's professional people with references, deposits, work record and good diction. And remember, letting agents are concerned with making money for one person, guess who that is.
You're welcome.
How are you meant to save any substantial amount of money (i.e. the 20k required for a deposit) when you are spending £800 on rent a month, try renting a single flat anywhere in Brighton for less that £750 a month, it is not possible. Then for most of Brighton you can stick £70 CT a month of top of that. And then Bills and then any transport you need for work because Brighton has barely any non service level jobs.You'll be ok with 5 or 10 years of existing savings from your 'solid, professional career'
Buy to let are scum of the earth and should be taxed out of business
How are you meant to save any substantial amount of money (i.e. the 20k required for a deposit) when you are spending £800 on rent a month, try renting a single flat anywhere in Brighton for less that £750 a month, it is not possible. Then for most of Brighton you can stick £70 CT a month of top of that. And then Bills and then any transport you need for work because Brighton has barely any non service level jobs.
thats all very well to say, but how would you frame such a tax to avoid those who circumstances mean they rent out a property? or other landlords for that matter, who is going to provide private rental if you exclude anyone who borrows money to buy property?
Happy New Year All
I've thought about going down the buy-to-let route for some time now and, if brave enough, will make 2015 the year I commit!
Throughout the normal course of life, I've bought and sold properties (sole residences that I've lived in) and am now in the fortunate position of having a sizable amount of equity.
Rather than ploughing it all back into another residential property, I'm considering downsizing my residential property and using most of the equity to purchase a flat to rent out. (I'd still need some of the equity as a deposit on the residential property which would have to be mortgaged.)
As a beginner landlord, I would use a letting agency to manage the tenants etc. How astronomical are their fees?
I don't have a very high risk appetite; I've worked too hard for too long to risk losing it all now, so I'd want to play it as safe as possible, i.e. flat near Brighton station. But I'm petrified that tenants will trash the place and I'll end up spending any profit on repairs, or worse, end up in debt.
I'd still be working so looking to do this as a sideline to boost my woefully inadequate pension fund!
I do have an appointment with an IFA next week to discuss financials, but just thought I'd try and get some personal experiences, both good and bad, from the wise owls of NSC. Would you recommend it? Have you done and wished you hadn't?
So please share your thoughts, by PM if preferred. I would appreciate it.
Many thanks in advance.
What about an recruitment consultant who is also a property landlord ?
Indeed.
We need to question the ludicrous Coalition propaganda that claims that the new rules that allow folk to convert their pension pots into a lump sum will be a good thing. The effect can only be further distortions of the housing market, combined with widespread personal tragedies arising from the collapse of the pension system.
I await to see if this actually happens. Taking your entire pension out and paying tax of 20/40% on it (after the free 25% part) doesn't seem to make sense to me. You can already take out 25% tax free and that would provide a decent enough deposit for a BTL for most. If it doesn't would you really want to take more out and pay tax on it?
Depends, at 55 why not, if you have £ 50k , 12.5k tax free, 37.5k say 20% = £ 7500 you can access £ 42.5k of it and use it to build up a property portfolio whereas with an annuity especially if you are single you wait until 65 and if you die it ends up with the company, this way people will have a meaningful asset to pass on
...And then Bills ...