azezil wrote: 200 a week! where you trying to live, Blackrock in a penthouse appartment I was looking at it earlier, some reasonable rates on double rooms, circa €350 a month, but about 5 - 7 miles from City Centre.
Mohanned wrote: In the blanch its not expensive
landser wrote: try buying a gaff and paying a mortgage, which i hope to do in the next few weeks.
PullMyFinger! wrote: I know I'll have to do it eventually but does the thought of a 30 year loan hanging over your head scare the bejaysus out of anyone else?
RuggieBear wrote: i'm paying 950 to live in a one bedder in d2 :eek: .....i can walk everywhere and if i feel lazy my taxi is rarely over 6e. Myself and girlie save a fortune in time and travel expenses...
Saint Something wrote: I pay 1000 to live in a beautiful two bedroom apartment in Dub3 - I can also walk anywhere, taxi's are about €8 - 10 and we have an excellent bus service that actually comes ever 10 minutes without fail.
PullMyFinger! wrote: 200 euros a week for somewhere I like says it all about the greed of landlords lately.
landser wrote: try buying a gaff and paying a mortgage, which i hope to do in the next few weeks. if anything rents have come down in the last couple of years. in 2001/02, i was paying €1.69 psqm pm for a dingy flat in clontarf. now i'm pay €1 psqm pm for an architect designed house in killester, a mile away, and my rent hasn't increased since 2003.
Neuro wrote: I have just three words for you: Supply and Demand.
Saint Something wrote: I have to say, while that sounds great and everything, I'm really fine with paying rent. I look on it as a service, I pay money to someone and I get to live in a beautiful place. I don't have to worry about any house owner stuff because I'm not a house owner, if I want to move, it's no biggie, I just do it. Eventually I will buy of course, but I'm very,very fussy. I'm not going to buy just to get "my foot on the ladder" I'm so sick of people saying that to me. I just feel so much freer with no mortgage. I know it would be just be a case of renting the house/apartment out if I owned it and I wanted to up sticks for a while... but then someone else would be living in my space... know what I mean. Nope, I think renting is great, I certainly don't consider it "dead money" That's another thing people keep saying. How could it be dead money, your paying to live somewhere, that's like saying that paying your bill after you stay in a hotel is dead money or paying a cleaner after they have cleaned your place is dead money. They're all just services we have to pay for..... anyway, that's my rant over and done with
D!ve^Bomb! wrote: as far as i see it you're wastin your money at the moment..
Saint Something wrote: Nope, I think renting is great, I certainly don't consider it "dead money" That's another thing people keep saying. How could it be dead money, your paying to live somewhere, that's like saying that paying your bill after you stay in a hotel is dead money or paying a cleaner after they have cleaned your place is dead money. They're all just services we have to pay for..... anyway, that's my rant over and done with
Neuro wrote: "negative equity".
vibe666 wrote: what do you think paying someone elses mortgage for them is? positive equity? seriously though, if I'd been in a position to get a mortgage when i got here almost 3 years ago and bought a house for €200k back then, not only could I have paid 30k off my own mortgage instead of my landlords mortgage by now, but the property would have gained 15-20% in value, or possibly more depending on where i bought. how is that "negative equity"?
PullMyFinger! wrote: Do rates usually come down in May when the students go back home to mammy? The amount of building going on in Dublin is incredible, surely we're due a drop in rates soon.
jesus_thats_gre wrote: You are missing the point. the majority of financial analysts/commentators are speculating that the housing market is gonna drop off over the next few years.. It may not happen, but if it does, alot of people are going to be in difficult positions.. You are talking about the last 3 years but your mortgage would likely be over 30 years.. What is going to happen over those other 27 long years.. Anything.. On top of that, because property prices are ridiculously high and people are getting themselves into a stupid amount of debt, the market will likely take a turn for the worse.. It just isn't sustainable. If it doesn't go bad, it will just even out..
You are missing the point. the majority of financial analysts/commentators are speculating that the housing market is gonna drop off over the next few years.. It may not happen, but if it does, alot of people are going to be in difficult positions.. You are talking about the last 3 years but your mortgage would likely be over 30 years.. What is going to happen over those other 27 long years.. Anything..