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Irish Property Market chat II - *read mod note post #1 before posting*

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,367 ✭✭✭JimmyVik


    I see landlords now required to register tenancies every year. I assume they will be charged a fee for that hassle too.

    Death by a thousand cuts. But no point keeping cutting after they are already dead.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,987 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    if we dont start introducing protective measures for everyone, including landlords, the whole system will completely collapse



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,367 ✭✭✭JimmyVik


    It has already collapsed. There is no fixing it now. This is the Titanic.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,987 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    i disagree there to a point, we re obviously in serious trouble regarding property, but there are some potentially good solutions out there, our political system is just stuck, unwilling or able to implement them, but this wont be easy to resolve, and it ll take years, if not decades



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 641 ✭✭✭J_1980


    Yes.

    we haven’t had any free markets in property for as long as I remember.

    the UK central London market is probably the closest: no rent controls, quick planning permission without nimbyism of the shires, decent landlord rights, largely irrelevant social housing provisions for builders that just adds costs onto the working population, no HAP equivalent support due to social rent caps that disqualify most of central London.

    the result in central London apartment market: abundance of supply (due to unlimited money pouring in, i.e. battersea, east london etc), stale rents since pretty much 2007, it takes a decade to fix it but London flats are starting to become very affordable in rent and price for local salaries ( and are actually really cheap compared to most other cities). Rents in luxury markets are probably down 10% since 2010 despite massive salary increases across the board. Ousting Ken Livingstone was the key + 12 years of Tory rule.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,987 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    ...and one of the most expensive markets on the planet, whereby most locals are unable to purchase, leaving it to the wealthy to do so.... go gentrification!

    NEXT!!!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,870 ✭✭✭Villa05


    Such a scenario which I wouldn't be opposed to would mean that the social/affordable housing policy would be extremely successful and self financing similar to the Dutch model



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,870 ✭✭✭Villa05


    Demand will always be greater than supply for such housing.

    Is it illegal to credit check a new customer?

    Could one ask in the application form the preferred method of payment?

    Could one offer a discount by using deduction from source income citing reduction in administrative costs as the reason?

    Could one secretly prioritise applicants that tick the positive boxes



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 779 ✭✭✭dubal


    Seems the only fair solution. The current prospect of middle income tax payers having no home and paying for someone else to have one with their tax can't work and will only alienate people.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 368 ✭✭keoclassic


    Your dead right, as a middle earner with no home, I feel like I'm being used a worker bee for the state. As I've pointed to in other forums, we are being fleeced for all we have and are expected to house the working class, which in part I'm not massively bothered about! But the long term welfare class can get fu@ked as far as I'm concerned and that pri@k of a housing minister with them. He's having meetings about building accommodation for refugees while current net tax contributors of the country are priced out of housing. Angry isn't what I am at the moment. Its a feeling of resent and being marginalised and I don't use strong words like that loosely. The policy of this government is to treat us home seekers with utter contempt, over inflating everything with cheap fu@kin money, with little benefit seen by people in my position, and there are hundreds of thousands of us between 25 and 40. House the refugees to look good but our own lads can keep paying rent, they are doing everything in the power to keep the prices rising and demand through the roof!



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,619 ✭✭✭Timing belt


    So your advocating the government undertakes secretive discrimination and creating a system that is open to bribery.

    Social housing needs to cater for everyone even if they have a bad credit rating, do not have a bank account or work in the gig economy where it wouldn’t be possible to deduct at source. If such processes existed the people not paying rent would take the government to cleaners with discrimination proceedings and still get away without paying.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,604 ✭✭✭Amadan Dubh


    I'd just leave if you can and not play the game anymore. You are being fleeced for your tax money and utilised as a tool to prop up the housing market via the high rents that have been manufactured for you to pay.

    On my side, it looks like it's good news on the job front, perhaps another week or so to get official confirmation. We're hoping we will be leaving this basket case by the end of the year and not playing the game anymore; to say I'd be relieved is an understatement as it is like the titanic or a slow motion car crash that's happening in Ireland. I no longer really care what happens to the property market here but it is clear that it is being manipulated by vested interests in a manner which leads me to think that economically we will be hit quite hard if the MNC gravy train stalls or reverses, given the staggering public expenditure which is just going to waste rather than being invested. And I don't want to be here when SF get into power, as much as I don't think much of FF/FG.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,870 ✭✭✭Villa05


    There are issues at social housing levels and affordable housing levels, IMO the issues are greater at the point where working people can't afford rents as they have additional costs of working and most likely commute further. Most would have no issue with deduction from source when rent is more affordable and potentially a shorter commute

    State housing can't cater for everyone straight away, breed a culture of compliance that sets the standard which quickly changes behaviour and delivers significant cost savings to the recepient. Success breeds sucess

    We don't want to make things easier for the drug dealers and there hench(wo) men, much better to make it easier for the folk that work and play by the rules.

    I'm sure there are exceptions that can be done for the people you cite, the main objective would be to minimise troublesome candidates that aid in ghettoising estates.

    If people who benefit from a scheme and fail to contribute there reduced contributions, we need measures that counteract it, same with private rent and mortgages. No such measures = failed state



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 368 ✭✭keoclassic


    Ya, but the problem is that its not getting better for the working, its getting worse!! We have shouldered enough for the country while the divide between the classes gets bigger and bigger. I think your right amadán dubh, but maybe they should stop building for the social housing and start building for us, the workers! Let the lads who need social housing emigrate instead like some of us have done in the past if work was tight.

    Post edited by keoclassic on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,619 ✭✭✭Timing belt


    The troublesome candidates such as dealers and their henchmen wouldn’t have any issues with any of your suggestions. They could easily have income deducted at source all it takes is to be put on the books of the gym, hairdressers, nail bar or garage that they use to wash their cash.

    what is needed is a more fair an equatable system that is not just available to a selected segment of society.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,870 ✭✭✭Villa05


    What I propose would be open to everyone, many will choose not to as social/affordable rents are determined by household income.

    Would it be fair to say that the working poor are the ones most disadvantaged by the current market and a scheme that focused on them would be a step towards the fairness you speak of



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    Hi Datadude,


    Establishing costs before bid. Bit of a shock and definitely limited in what we can bid as a consequence.... Mortgage broker has been a total nightmare querying lots of purchases etc. and expecting multiple surveys. Hopefully not a load of money down the drain.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    House is over 100 years old with thick walls. To be honest, I was told that's the price and would need to get a few builders to tender, so not like trying to pull the wool over my eyes or anything, really helpful but was also shown precovid price which was lower.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,619 ✭✭✭Timing belt


    It’s the squeezed low to middle earners who don’t earn enough to buy and who earn to much to qualify for help. Some of these individuals will have good jobs and would be in a position to pay a mortgage rather than rent but are unable to do so because they can’t save while paying rent at the same time and are locked out of the housing market as a result.

    Providing a housing model whereby they would be able to save would make a big difference for younger generations so they could buy in the future but there is a large number of people that will be older that could be self sufficient and pay a mortgage that also need to be catered for now or accept that come retirement will need state support to pay rent.

    Regardless of whether the model is to rent or to buy it all depends on the ability to build new housing and we all know that regardless of what housing model we are constrained by the no of builders.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,569 ✭✭✭DataDude


    Best of luck if you do decide to proceed. Buying a walk in house was awkward enough for us, so I don’t envy the task you have ahead.

    Have heard similar stories from friends and family getting quotes from small extensions to full builds and it’s always - “two years ago it would only have cost you…”. Tough to hear.

    I do wonder with the Fed rate action and rapid shrinking of the balance sheet whether we might see a quick reversal of the madness of the past two years. Time will tell!



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 641 ✭✭✭J_1980


    Do you really think that former hedge fund manager JayPowell is serious about hiking rates and killing the golden goose of endless monetary inflation?

    The federal government will hardly be able to run the current deficits and debt levels with 4% long term rates. Unless they actually start cutting expenditure and the deficits, I wouldn’t trust anything they SAY.


    and I can only laugh about all the people who want to emigrate…. Going to Australia, NZ, Dubai, Canada, US, UK and then complaining that ireland is “too neoliberal” and “rightwing” and pushing for left ideas. Lol oh the irony….



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,870 ✭✭✭Villa05


    I think we are speaking about the same people. Security of tenure allows those people to move on with their lives and have families or whatever else they wish to pursue.

    In addition a private market that walks away from middle to lower earners, but still sufficient income to contribute to their own homes should be viewed as an opportunity.

    We may be moving towards a global slowdown/ recession with long term money still very cheap. This may provide an opportunity for increased labour and cooling effect on material prices. The state still has plenty of land if we can move away from dependence on vested interests, there may be an opportunity to make serious inroads into solving the issue, offsetting the expected recession and putting us in a much better place for the new world which is at major tipping point

    Post edited by Villa05 on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 513 ✭✭✭getoutadodge


    "On my side, it looks like it's good news on the job front, perhaps another week or so to get official confirmation. We're hoping we will be leaving this basket case by the end of the year and not playing the game anymore; to say I'd be relieved is an understatement as it is like the titanic or a slow motion car crash that's happening in Ireland. I no longer really care what happens to the property market here but it is clear that it is being manipulated by vested interests in a manner which leads me to think that economically we will be hit quite hard if the MNC gravy train stalls or reverses, given the staggering public expenditure which is just going to waste rather than being invested. And I don't want to be here when SF get into power, as much as I don't think much of FF/FG."

    Good luck with the move ( i'll likely follow next winter) but regrettably there's no somewhere over the rainbow where property is affordable ..say at 3 to 4 multiples of gross annual income that was the post WW2 norm. I know because I looked on the ground not just on line. The multiple is 10 now in Dublin but even worse in Madrid, Lisbon, Rome, or London or Barcelona or further afield outside the EU such as Istanbul or anywhere in Oz or NZ. Most people by way of example in Lisbon take home an average of 1100 euro net. There is not much stock under 250k that is livable i.e. it's impossible for the average joe to ever own a home by leveraging a salary against a mortgage. Renting a room at the age of 30 plus while fully employed is reverting to 19th century model where most were forced to live in "lodgings". Millions emigrated from this continent on a wing and prayer to the Americas, South Africa or Oz etc ...in desperation to get the monkey off the back. Now a century later if I m sitting in a slum in Lagos or Cairo etc I can go on line and navigate the Social Welfare entitlements in Dublin or Stockholm etc ...and pack my bags. Flights are cheap.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 513 ✭✭✭getoutadodge




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,619 ✭✭✭Timing belt


    If you leave your just playing the game elsewhere maybe rules are a bit different but generally it’s swings and roundabouts.

    wishing you all the best on your new adventure and hope it all works out well in the end.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 687 ✭✭✭Subzero3


    Strategically you are better off going all in trying to get a council house. If it means not working or being "homeless" to get you or your family up the que then you will get emergency accommodation. The system at present is not fair for hardworking middle income earners. You can give out about welfare class ect but I prefer to think of it as don't hate the player, hate the game. And the game sucks.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 997 ✭✭✭iColdFusion


    Plus you dont understand the rules of the game or have any local knowledge in another country, people do seem to think the grass is always greener and I'm sure the OP has done their homework but even I was surprised to see how low Irelands income taxes were compared to some other EU countries.

    I think the only really bargains involve full time WFH with an Irish salary in the likes of Canary Islands, Croatia etc, unfortunately anywhere in the EU that is offering you a good salary will likely have similar problems to Ireland and you have no safety net of friends and family.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,913 ✭✭✭PommieBast


    Everywhere has problems but the problems are different. What I found with buying in London is that they don't fart around like Irish EAs do, with only unsold properties listed and the asking price is what you end up paying. However there are things like council tax and water charges that Ireland does not really have.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,431 ✭✭✭combat14


    surely if rates go up it will be gradually cost the state more to borrow to make debt repayments and will necessitate even higher taxes here to meet existing obligations... higher interest rates coupled with higher taxes sounds like a dire version of 2008 all over again.. hardly a cure to our national housing crisis...



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,839 ✭✭✭mcsean2163


    Interesting

    Ardclough is a nice spot but development not sold out. Seems to be a lot more on the market now maybe councils not buying second hand homes is having an affect?

    Just noticed this

    All time high in December 2021. Methinks prices may start to decline a little.. .



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