morrga wrote: » We want to live in South Dublin on the Wicklow border. Carrickmines or Shankill hardly the Dalkey, Killiney profile. My point is the govt deem it ok to support couples in North Dublin who earn the same salaries as ourselves.
Stheno wrote: » Sure look at all the posters earlier in the thread who signed contracts before the opening day for this who were disgusted to have lost out!
CramCycle wrote: » Inside of the greater Dublin area, the cap would hope to provide a target price for builders to sell their house at, and not above. Having that cap at 500k is ridiculous, and I imagine a lobby group helped with this number. It should never have went above 350k. As for that rubbish about north and south side, plenty of houses north of the river with million plus price tags and plenty below with sub 350k
68 lost souls wrote: » Not too many below 350k southside. Perhaps the 20% up to 400k would be a compromise? Dunnno why you are adement of 350K? We are in the position of having found a new build we loved below 350k and missed phase 1, waited 6 months for phase 2 but they jumped by 30k to above 350k or so and couldnt afford but then this scheme was announced later so we can now purchase. EDIT: Price jump was well before budget so that is not to blame
ifaour wrote: » Did someone workout the math to see if getting a mortgage on 80% LTV to avail of the tax rebate is better OR if I can bring the LTV down to, say 75% and not take advantage of the rebate would be better for me? This is assuming property price is 320K and APR of what the big banks are offering for 80% vs 70-80%
morrga wrote: » The 600k threshold will remain until 31st December so once contracts are signed before then, we qualify!!
Michael D Not Higgins wrote: » Can you source this, please?
morrga wrote: » Yes, spoke to Michael McGrath this afternoon who confirmed this will be noted in the bill when published.
Michael D Not Higgins wrote: » I doubt this to be the case, especially when FF were the ones pushing for the 500k limit. Not saying you're lying but he might be.
morrga wrote: » Have an e mail from Barry Cowen too confirming the same. Said it's unfair to remove it for current year transactions given that people would have acted upon the original announcement.
morrga wrote: » Now we are left high and dry and we are short 20k of the purchase price.
Michael D Not Higgins wrote: » I guess that's fair. Keep in mind the rebate is paid next year and you will need to qualify for the mortgage without the rebate.
morrga wrote: » I do need to mind that alright. I think we are not drawing down till April so will apply for rebate in January.
68 lost souls wrote: » Not too many below 350k southside. Perhaps the 20% up to 400k would be a compromise? Dunnno why you are adement of 350K? We are in the position of having found a new build we loved and missed phase 1, waited 6 months for phase 2 but they jumped by 30k or so and couldnt afford but then this scheme was announced later so we can now purchase.
Michael D Not Higgins wrote: » And with an exception they would usually need an even higher salary, which means they'd be in the 150-200k salary range. Even less sympathy.
Michael D Not Higgins wrote: » But I should be entitled to buy the new build in Rathgar which costs €1.15 million then. We shouldn't have a cap at all. Everyone should get the 20k, even if they have a deposit of 188k and a salary of 270k. The line has to be drawn somewhere, otherwise it will be seen as a tax break for the rich.
Nicole Hissing Thunderstorm wrote: » I have to say I totally disagree with capping it on house price and having the ltv limits. It should be open to all FTBs regardless of house value or how much they need to borrow. It's the only fair system imo. Basically people who saved hard are being penalised compared to those who saved less and people able to afford more expensive houses are also being penalised. So not only is a higher earner subsiding the day to day living of lower earners due to our very unfair tax system which penalises those who do well and gives everything to those who do nothing but now they are also helping people buy houses while they themselves are being prevented from getting the relief on their already far higher tax burden. Total bull.
Collyb101 wrote: » My GF and I have only one household in the whole of Dublin we are related to. We would love to live close to them so our kids could play together etc. The area is too expensive and we are going to buy at the opposite side of Dublin. No complaints. Completely understandable. Not yapping. We cannot afford it and that's that.
Bob24 wrote: » I think the only fair system is to scrap the scheme altogether. At the end of the day the problem is not high income v.s. low income, it is more all taxpayers (either on low or high income) subsiding developers through this scheme which is not addressing the supply issue and hence not helping anyone but developers. Having said hat if it has to remain, I would rather have it capped so to limit the damage in terms of wasted taxpayer's money and artificially inflated prices.
ionapaul wrote: » However, I'd also like to add that my preferred option would definitely be to scrap the scheme in its entirety, as mentioned above I just think that if the scheme is here to stay that price caps of any kind are manifestly unfair, given that it's open solely to FTBs buying new builds.
izzyflusky wrote: » So will banks accept a deposit of X minus the 5% when applying? If originally I needed let's say 33k I could get a mortgage with a 19k+ deposit? Or would they expect the 33k regardless?
cronos wrote: » Can someone walk me through trying to gain a 70% LTV loan for the help to buy scheme in the following scenario. House price: 380,000 Salary + performance based bonus : 70k + 11k 70k * 3.5 = 245,000 (central bank 3.5 times salary rule) 70% of 380,00 is 266,000 Where does the help to buy money fit into the above equation? Anyway for me to qualify for the mortgage? How do bonuses count towards the 3.5 times salary rule?