LamieRobertson
Not awoke
Move them up north.
Or alternatively give them your house and get on ya bike up north
Move them up north.
Hi,
Has anyone done any research into this or can point me to any good sites? I want to help them get on the property market, can afford to lend/give them some money BUT not sure what is the most efficient legal way?
There's some sense in this. The unaffordability of houses comes from speculation from wealthy Russians and Chinese, who then never intend to sell them on (or even rent them out in lots of cases). The Tories are never going to do anything that upsets the free market, no matter how badly this is disadvantaging countless British young people.
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There's some sense in this. The unaffordability of houses comes from speculation from wealthy Russians and Chinese, who then never intend to sell them on (or even rent them out in lots of cases). The Tories are never going to do anything that upsets the free market, no matter how badly this is disadvantaging countless British young people.
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Russians and Chinese investing in London..but distorting the market elsewhere? Really?
...yes we have the free market championed by the Tories..but remind us what efforts the last Labour government did regarding this?
House are often perceived as an investment as against a home ..and until that changes ...more investment in houses to rent ..a greater balance between supply and demand ...builders not allowed to sit on land banks(?)...etc etc
Wow. Just wow.
Obviously a baby boomber, not realising how lucky you've had it and now shit young people have it today.
If I had grown up kids today I would feel it was my duty to help them out financially, given that the boomers were lucky enough to be born at the right time to have incredible accumulative wealth (and not entirely earned, relatively speaking, let's be honest). Many of them are practically millionaires, only as they were lucky enough to enter the property market at the right time.
Feel sorry for your kids to be honest. Enjoy your luxurious retirement, while your kids struggle to make ends meet for their entire lives and have barely no retirement pot when they're your age, in all likelikhood.
Wow. Just wow.
Obviously a baby boomber, not realising how lucky you've had it and now shit young people have it today.
If I had grown up kids today I would feel it was my duty to help them out financially, given that the boomers were lucky enough to be born at the right time to have incredible accumulative wealth (and not entirely earned, relatively speaking, let's be honest). Many of them are practically millionaires, only as they were lucky enough to enter the property market at the right time.
Feel sorry for your kids to be honest. Enjoy your luxurious retirement, while your kids struggle to make ends meet for their entire lives and have barely no retirement pot when they're your age, in all likelikhood.
Wow. Just wow.
Obviously a baby boomber, not realising how lucky you've had it and now shit young people have it today.
If I had grown up kids today I would feel it was my duty to help them out financially, given that the boomers were lucky enough to be born at the right time to have incredible accumulative wealth (and not entirely earned, relatively speaking, let's be honest). Many of them are practically millionaires, only as they were lucky enough to enter the property market at the right time.
Feel sorry for your kids to be honest. Enjoy your luxurious retirement, while your kids struggle to make ends meet for their entire lives and have barely no retirement pot when they're your age, in all likelikhood.
I know it's your kid HW, but at 33 he can walk on his own.
Save the money for when/if he really screws up/has a horrific life situation and actually needs it. Not to help someone out when they don't have what they want, just because they haven't earned it.....
And yes, you could say that you've been extremely lucky in comparison. Age, job, pension etc. But to cut into that when it's just for shits and giggles, rather then when he might actually NEED it, is a mistake.
To me anyway.
We've benefited from a few quid here and there from (her) parents. But only stuff that's made things sightly easier rather than buying our house/car etc.
But when the shit hit the fan and we needed legal representation, they stepped up and saved us.... Not a huge amount of money, but that was actually life changing (and we're paying it back).
Not everyone needs to own their own house nowadays. Keep your hand in your pocket. You never know when you might REALLY need to dip into it for your wastrel offspring!
Mine will have no excuse btw. He's getting his "child trust fund" thing at 18 with a letter from me ending "Screw that up and you're on your own sunshine!". [emoji23]
Hi,
Has anyone done any research into this or can point me to any good sites? I want to help them get on the property market, can afford to lend/give them some money BUT not sure what is the most efficient legal way?
I was given three grand to help me with my deposit on a 57K mortgage by the olds. I was grateful. These days with properties here starting around 250K, I'd need to front my lad about 175K because he has no savings and a crap income. And after that there is a real risk he won't be able to keep up the repayments (job not secure). The bar is high.
True.Not having a go at your son HWT, but at his age you must have had a half decent job and been able to get the mortgage. Your suon sounds like he has 'other priorities' in life and working/getting set up on his own.
My wifes brother is still at home, never moved out and he's 45. Works part time and plays the guitar, piano and generally does - well I dont know but its pretty much SFA. My FIL (now passed away) would go nuts over him in frustration to get him to 'do something with his life'. Didnt work. I put up a new fence for the MIL last week and last summer remodelled their back garden into a low maintenance one as the MIL is mid 70's now and not too sprightly on her pegs, my BIL did sod all to help. Sometimes you have just got to accept that people are different and some just dont have the drive and push of others.
..........and we're safely out of the EU......................will think about it when Jezza and McDonnell have gone.
Interesting subject as preferred option is to give each of my two a "long-term loan" to get them on the housing market which will be written off at some point.
Are there tax implications to this and if they split up from their partners could the partner be entitled to 50% ?
Some of the old lags on NSC met my son many times, too, and know what a lovely lad he is.