neutral guy wrote: » ECB will make money work one of other way.
The Belly wrote: » No queues of banks. But prices will fall when and at what time is hard to gauge as the gov keep this sh.t show going but they will.
Hubertj wrote: » Oh and they will have to drop the dgs in return for support for a bailout. Or bail in.:D
Graham wrote: » There's going to be a lot of very disappointed people if the government manage to keep the show going until the economy recovers.
cubatahavana wrote: » Queues of sellers? queues of banks? Towns of empty property? Next year? I’m buying now, but may buy again next year if this is the case. Thanks for the tip Really?
cubatahavana wrote: » Queues of sellers? queues of banks? Towns of empty property? Next year? I’m buying now, but may buy Shaun next year if this is the case. Thanks for the tip Really?
neutral guy wrote: » He will easily afford it next year When property market will collapse Permanent job,permanent incomes,there will be queue of banks who will want give him mortgage And there will be queue of sellers who will want get rid of the property before banks will take it for free. There will be towns of empty property previously used for rent.
Augeo wrote: » He can't afford it on his current salary.
Yep that's exactly it, I'll have to commute up and down to Dublin and maybe get a cheap room on a Wednesday.
It's three hour drive in total every day.
I have 30K saved but max the bank will give me is 130 and that's with the bonus included.
I get 2500 a month and can afford the 750 monthly repayment
inthenip wrote: » Yep that's exactly it, I'll have to commute up and down to Dublin and maybe get a cheap room on a Wednesday. It's three hour drive in total every day. I have 30K saved but max the bank will give me is 130 and that's with the bonus included. I get 2500 a month and can afford the 750 monthly repayment.
Hubertj wrote: » Cgt isn’t supportive if start ups in Ireland. Property prices are irrelevant. Plenty of incubators, office space included in series funding etc.
The Belly wrote: » Tax is was to high property to expensive
neutral guy wrote: » If you like the house and location Buy it ! No matter when you buy the matter is when you sell.If you not gonna sell then no need thinking at all ! The smaller the price on market the bigger is competition The bigger the price on market the less the competition Choose,or you now or somebody later. If you dont care what you buy then simply wait until market will crash.
PommieBast wrote: » Pre-Covid I used to go to a lot of the Dublin startup-related meetups. Very vibrant scene back in 2014-2016 but last few years a lot of it disappeared due to spiralling costs.
PropQueries wrote: » Sorry to burst the bubble the media has being feeding everyone for the past 6 years but there is little to no 'start-up' culture in Ireland. London and Berlin are the IT start-up cities in Europe and my understanding is that Latvia is the FinTech start-up capital of Europe.
TheSheriff wrote: » Actually shocked you didn't tell this poster to wait and scoop up a 2 bed in drogheda for 20k post apocalypse
inthenip wrote: » Anyone any advice, On 36K with a 10% bonus.In a good multinational company and looking to buy. I'm with the company 5 years and no higher paid jobs have come up in the five years as no one leaves the company. I'm looking to buy a house in my area that are going for 200K. Im over qualified for my role but the thoughts of moving back to Dublin is not what I want to do just to get 55K which o could easily get in order to meet the 3.5 rule. Thanks
Assetbacked wrote: » If we see a return to austerity in the EU, consider Brexit a legitimate course of action for other countries, including Ireland.
jgt3 wrote: » Okay so do I buy a house or not?
PropQueries wrote: » Just thinking. You make an excellent point. If rents drop, that would definitely encourage a start-up culture to take place. Only problem once it takes off is if the landlords start increasing the rent and we're back to square one. Your point stands though.
schmittel wrote: » Definitely one solution is landlords dropping the price, then no doubt there will be less of a shift to WFH. If I owned a Georgian on Baggot St, and tenants didn't renew, I'd try shifting to serviced offices/meeting rooms/call answering/business address etc. Which I guess is good for the likes of WeWork. I could see an Airbnb for offices booking platform type of business doing well. We could see the likes of Baggot St transformed - get rid of the dreary solicitors and accountants, fill it up full of young energetic start ups!