Deleted User wrote: » I don't really feel like it is a massive committment tbh, I bought my first house when I was 20. I mean, I would have to pay for somewhere to live wouldn't I? As it happens, I rent my property out, and I rent a different property, so if I decided to up sticks and leave, I would just keep renting out my own property and it would pay for itself.
BraziliaNZ wrote: » I didn't even know what a mortgage was when I was 20!
krudler wrote: » Rent if thats what you want, I couldnt imagine tying myself to a life of debt at this point, too much uncertainty, might want to up sticks and leave in a few months so I'd rather have no ties. I'm glad I never took the "sure rent is dead money like!" advice of people during the boom.
Shryke wrote: » I don't imagine I'll be in Ireland in 10 years time. Maybe not 5. Anyone that can choose to settle for a lifetime in the one place and put themselves under such a financial burden is very different to myself. That's excepting having a wife and kids, I suppose. Not things I plan on any time soon either. The future is an uncertain thing. I'm not going to make the only certain thing about it a massive debt that needs paying off. Total madness. There is a huge obsession with property here. It's very sickening. In the country side it's appalling. Everyone has to build a new 2 story 50 feet down the road from their parents house. That's as far as they're ever going to live away from home. The parents would nearly hear them having a roll about in bed from across a field. Near me there are 4 siblings all of which built a house right beside the other and just down from their parents in the middle of nowhere. It's not that there is something wrong with building your own home, it's that there is seen to be something wrong with you if you don't... Am I ranting? The place is so parochial sometimes it really brings me down.
Deleted User wrote: » I just don't like the idea of paying someone else's mortgage when I can pay for my own
Kurz wrote: » Anyone who's playing the "Property Discussion Drinking Game"; drink a shot now!
Diapason wrote: » Sickening? That people want to live life whatever way they see fit? Okay...
Shryke wrote: » There is a huge obsession with property here. It's very sickening..
Diapason wrote: » So, *you* think people shouldn't be obsessed with property, and ergo you find it sickening? Fine, you're not obsessed with property, but what odds if other people are? I personally don't get the obsession some people seem to have about other people's obsession with property, but hey, live and let live. You want to rent, more power to your elbow.
Shryke wrote: » Troll.
Deleted User wrote: » I don't really know what that means tbh
krudler wrote: » its one of the pro-buying phrases, rent is dead money, why pay someone elses mortgage, etc, etc. you could make a drinking game of any thread in AH these days :pac:
Diapason wrote: » Shryke wrote: » Troll. No. Most people I know who buy/build houses do it because they need somewhere to live, they'd like to live somewhere comfortable and convenient for them, and if starting a family or whatever, they'd like the security of not having to deal with a landlord's whims. That's about the sum total of the "obsession" that I see. Just parroting back the pub-talk mantra that "Irish people are obsessed with property" doesn't make it so.
WumBuster wrote: » Im coming to the conclusion that the smartest thing to do is just to keep renting rather than buying my own property.Ive no real interest in owning one or buying or the hassle and rigmarole that goes with it. I like to just be able to up and move with a drop of a hat(or a month's notice). We are a nation that places high value on owning their own property and i just fear down the line I will have difficulties in getting a partner to settle down with if I only want to rent. So there is pressure in that regard. This ''John and Mary down the road are only renting'' mentality. Do you think it's a big deal? Countries in Europe such a holland and Germany people mainly rent because they have enough common sense to see that life is too short to get yourself in over your head in debt that you may never be able to pay back. That is all.
Shryke wrote: » I speak from my own experience with people, I'll let you be the expert on pub talk. You're dreaming if you think Irish people aren't obsessed with property. That's about the last thing I would expect anyone to deny, even on here.
naughtysmurf wrote: » Just a question for those who decide not to buy and to rent long term, do you save a substantial amount each month to cover your rental costs after you stop working or retire & your income generally speaking drops, sometimes significantly? Just wondering
Fizzlesque wrote: » I love having my own house. Before buying it (7 years ago) I spent 3 years living in a tiny bedsit, and eventually that was really starting to have a negative impact on my life. Like living in a caravan without the holiday feeling. Although I house shared for a few years before moving in to the bedsit, mostly I've lived alone (apart from a few years of living with a boyfriend) since moving out of my family home (when I was 19) and I never really liked sharing - much prefer my own space. I was lucky, I had a decent deposit so my monthly mortgage repayment isn't much more than my bedsit rent was. It really made sense for me to buy a house and has turned out to be one of the best decisions I've ever made. Took me a month to stop sleeping sitting room and get used to having more than one room and an upstairs too. Great to finally be able to invite more than one person over for a visit or for dinner. 7 years later, I still love my house and have absolutely no regrets buying it. I can understand people's worries about buying a house, if they don't know where they'll be (or want to be) in X amount of year's time - I felt exactly the same until the year I bought my house, but, having been given notice to move out of rented accommodation a few times and then, as mentioned above, the negative effect of living in a tiny space for so long, combined with the natural changes getting older brought about, one day the idea that had been very unappealing to me became very appealing. I lived in other countries and did a lot of travelling in my twenties, so I don't feel like I'm trapped or stuck. If anything, after years of being a bit adrift, I absolutely love the grounding effect having my own home has had on me. Then again, I'm in my forties now, but I would never have been able to consider taking on a mortgage in my twenties, or even my early thirties. I don't think anyone here can advise you what to do, OP, but I wouldn't let the fear of what'll happen if/when you meet someone you're serious about be a deciding factor. You might meet someone with their own house already, or someone who prefers to rent same as you do. Or someone who has no intention of living with another person. It sounds like you hope to have a family one day - do you? Even if you do, that still shouldn't be something you focus on now with regard to deciding whether or not to buy. If being able to move at the drop of a hat (or a month's notice) is something you currently value, then starting a family is unlikely to be something you're thinking about either. In which case, why worry about other people's feelings on owning their own house. Same goes if the day does come when you feel you'd like to own your own house - don't worry about what others feel about renting. It's your life, do it your way.