cantdecide wrote: » My parents bought their house (a detached 4 bed bungalow) on the back of my dad's carpenter's wages (my mother was a stay at home mum of three kids) in the early 80s.
Deleted User wrote: » What determines an amateur landlord? You're probably describing any individual that bought a house. :rolleyes: And how sure are you about this expectation of the mortgage definitely being paid by renters?I charge 800 pm. My mortgage is 733.26pm, my life assurance is 23.12pm, and my mortgage cover is 66.52pm. So between my mortgage/insurance cost's I'm making a loss of 21.90 per month. That's not even taking into account the extra costs such as management fees, paying for repairs, moderate requests from the tenant for extra installations. etc. Now I could increase the rent on my property to be more in line with others in Cork, and then, my tenant would seek somewhere cheaper to live and since she has a stable job with a family most other landlords will offer discounts to get her. So I charge more, lose out on a reliable tenant and get in single professionals instead who do far more in damages, who I have to chase for payments, etc. Amateur landlord... Yup. I'm curious,Vronsky... Do you have a property and are you renting it out to anyone? We no longer do. That dream scenario ended well over a decade ago for individual buyers. And doubling in value? lol. Now that's funny. It happened for my parents who bought in the 60s but for the rest of us buying within the last 10-20 years? Very few people would have been that lucky. Quick edit: I'm sure there are individuals and companies making a killing out there on rents. I suspect it's happening in Dublin, and in very select areas of other cities... but I do get tired of this belief, that alll landlords are making decent money from renting. Many of us are scraping along hoping the market rises enough that we can sell and make a slight profit.
cantdecide wrote: » You're not really saying anything now (as you hadn't in your previous post really). If you're saying that people are facing the same economical reality in 2018 that they did in the '70s and '80s then you're just showing how out of touch with reality you are. My parents bought their house (a detached 4 bed bungalow) on the back of my dad's carpenter's wages (my mother was a stay at home mum of three kids) in the early 80s. Could they do that today? The answer is absolutely not.
andekwarhola wrote: » That was the 80s. Irish people love some aspects of the current economy like high wages, looser credit and low interest rates but magically want house prices to remain static for 35 years, even when thousands of other well paid professionals are all chasing the same houses as them in a few Dublin postcodes.
Mooooo wrote: » Try borrowing when interest rates were up on 20%
Vronsky wrote: » Landlords can fuck off with their poor mouth tbh.
cantdecide wrote: » You're either having me on or absolutely deluded if you believe there isn't rafts of people out there on unreasonably low wages. House prices have risen drastically higher than inflation and mortgage terms have doubled since my parents generation. Bloody right things have changed since the 80s.
mariaalice wrote: » The lowest price new house on myhome is 285k https://www.myhome.ie/residential/brochure/elder-heath-elder-heath-kiltipper-road-dublin-24/2963029 That is a 3bed A rated house in Dublin the most expensive area to by property. A two income couple on 30k each with a deposit of 28k could buy one of those house. It would cost 1,075 a month at 3% over 30 year. That does not seem expensive to me. The rental market does seem to be where the problem is.
Deleted User wrote: » Did I claim this "poor mouth"? :rolleyes: Rather I pointed out that many landlords are not making these huge profits that many here seem to believe happening, nor is renting as profitable as many believe. (Not going to bother checking your calculations/guesstimations since such is based on thin air).
mariaalice wrote: » That is a 3bed A rated house in Dublin the most expensive area to by property. A two income couple on 30k each with a deposit of 28k could buy one of those house. It would cost 1,075 a month at 3% over 30 year. That does not seem expensive to me. The rental market does seem to be where the problem is.
LirW wrote: » I'm not 100% sure but I recall that the development borders another one that's rough. There's Heathfield in Finglas that's even cheaper and the houses are supposed to be great but you'd be right next to a halting site and have nothing around in Walking distance. Passed it many times, it's a nice development in a very grim part of the city (and the outside walls facing the street have some obscene graffiti on it :pac: )
cantdecide wrote: » 3.5 times 60k is 210k + 28k is 238k. They'd need to be on 36.5k each or have the difference in cash, by my maths. From what I understand, a couple living and working in Dublin earning 30-35k is fairly unlikely to have 28k without outside help. Consider then if they have kids or are thinking about having any soon.
Vronsky wrote: » You won't address the post because I made the obvious point that you cannot discount leverage and rising property values when looking at the profitability of renting It is still profitable to be a landlord and have to top up the mortgage by 50% as illustrated by my example. The ideas that unless rent is able to cover all the costs of a landlord for it to be profitable is wrong.
There are lots of valid arguments on how to fix the "housing crisis", and I've seen nearly all of them shot down here by equaly valid counter-arguments.
Housing crisis must be solved to avoid another crash State’s passivity in addressing housing issues is economically and socially dangerous
Idbatterim wrote: » https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/housing-crisis-must-be-solved-to-avoid-another-crash-1.3343163 an article from the Irish times, like I said in the OP, what they are doing or not doing i.e. the government is a moral disgrace! How much is enough for these bast*rds? their few rental properties, outrageous pay and pension for the appalling job they do at running the country! they are parasites!
Ipso wrote: » But yet they are expected to solve the housing crisis!
FTA69 wrote: » Nah they would just have flogged the water system off to a private company and you'd be paying through the bollix so some vulture fund can make a massive profit. That's what's happened pretty much everywhere else.