cnocbui wrote: » Where does this circle of friends currently live? Where do they work? I suspect this might come as a surprise to you, but not everyone would necessarily consider living in a capital city an improvement in lifestyle. There are some fairly well off internationally famous people who live here or have houses and they always seem to be outside of Dublin. One lives on an island in a lake, another in a castle, another in an isolated house outside Cork.
TheSheriff wrote: » ......... If I could get the same salary in Cork..... I would be gone, out of the rat race. .........
TheSheriff wrote: » ..........We decided that for the purposes of building wealth (i.e. a house, security, savings etc), Dublin was the best option for the immediate future. .............
Augeo wrote: » The rat race is nationwide. Cork and Galway aren't much behind Dublin.You won't build wealth by borrowing fnck loads to buy a house.
TheSheriff wrote: » Yes, but its relative for us. We could move to Cork/Limerick and get a cheaper house and half the salary. Is that any better? I don't know, maybe it is.
TheSheriff wrote: I know in my friend circle and work circle who would all be on 50-100k salaries, dual income etc. are now gearing up to purchase because of imminent falls, whereas a few months back they had held off and and this may in fact have the opposite effect and keep prices up.
TheSheriff wrote: Yes, but its relative for us. We could move to Cork/Limerick and get a cheaper house and half the salary. Is that any better? I don't know, maybe it is.
Villa05 wrote: » Limerick/Cork have some of the highest salaries in the country, with lower living costs, they get to enjoy more of that salary
TheSheriff wrote: » Ah look, I don't know if it has any relevance to what we are discussing. Maybe we are looking for different jobs types. I don't think myself and my friends are all naive either tough, we are all in Dublin because the salaries are higher/career progression is better. Its a moot point, all I was saying is my group of friends are now looking to hop on the property ladder if/when the opportunity presents. That's all. It's likely they wont all get access to credit, all I meant was perhaps its a micro view of wider groups. Who knows. All speculation at this point. I mentioned before we've negotiated down the price of the house we are buying due to covid. We might get a few more % if we waited another few months, but mentally we are sick of looking/renting and want to have security. Would I give it all up tomorrow if I could get the same job in Limerick/Cork with the same opportunities. Absolutely
Villa05 wrote: » Even for Dublin, that is a salary that puts you in the top 30/40% of income earners. Is that a bracket that would normally struggle to buy a house? Are prices overvalued? To a rational person, one would have to say Yes, very much so
cnocbui wrote: » In what way are are house prices in Dublin over-valued? Compared to what? Dublin is a capital city, not some small provincial hamlet. How many people living in London, or Paris, working at what you do, can afford to buy a house more easily than you can?
schmittel wrote: » What sort of properties and profiles are you and our friends looking at. City centre/SCD/apartments houses. Are you married/singles/families etc? ie anecdotally what are the average late 20s/early 30s buyers going for at the minute? whatever they can get within a budget or do they have something more specific in mind?
landofthetree wrote: » Those cities have a much better public transport system than Dublin.
TheSheriff wrote: » Also do you have any link to the source for this ? Genuinely interested.
cnocbui wrote: » My wife is a lecturer at UL. She's not the only one. She paid €100 K for a two bedroom house within walking distance of the city centre. At the bottom of the dip, mind.
TheSheriff wrote: » We've gone for a 3 bed semi D, nice sized garden, close to good transport links etc. No interest on our part to live in or near the city centre. If I can get in relatively quickly on the dart/Luas we are happy. We value space more than anything, nice neighbourhood etc. We started about a year ago looking at apartments, but felt we wanted a garden etc. I know a single friend of mine has sale agreed on an apartment - likely as he is a single income.
Claw Hammer wrote: » What has that got to do with high salaries in Cork and Galway?
cnocbui wrote: » Since when was Limerick in Galway?
Claw Hammer wrote: » It wasn't but the fact of someone buying a house has nothing to do with salary levels.
cnocbui wrote: » How much do you think university lecturers with a Phd. get paid then?
Claw Hammer wrote: » They get paid very little but the fact of one buying a property does not have any link with the issue of salary levels generally in particular cities.
Deleted User wrote: » Top 30/40%? Try top 10% if you're on >60K Euro...https://www.thejournal.ie/readme/high-earner-ireland-755580-Jan2013/
cnocbui wrote: » Ok; how about someone buying a turn-key house in walking distance of a city centre for 1.2 times their annual salary. Does that help you get it?
Claw Hammer wrote: » What has that got to do with salary levels generally?
cnocbui wrote: » Sorry, I can't do your thinking for you.
schmittel wrote: » 3 bed semi in the Dublin suburbs. And I guess judging by your posts if in 15 years time, with decent career progression under your belt, you could keep the salary and relocate somewhere else thanks to WFH you would? Just one example of many in which houses in Dublin are likely to be vacated. Cumulatively I think there's a fair chance that they will pass a tipping point whereby they are being vacated faster than they are filled. Leading to oversupply.