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How can someone in their 30s afford a house - PLEASE READ MOD WARNING IN OP

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Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 8,239 ✭✭✭Pussyhands


    spurshero wrote: »
    Jesus ya may as well be dead ....

    As someone who ticks most of those boxes....

    If you think smoking, buying lunch at work, cycling instead of driving to work, working outdoors instead of the gym is so much of a sacrifice that you "may aswell be dead" then I don't think there's any helping you.

    OP gave you a list of cost cutting measures, you don't need to do them all.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,903 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    Honestly I saved feck all during my 20's. Way too interested in enjoying myself. I'd have a small amount saved but would end up using for for something like a car or holidays. Towards the start of my 30's, I realised that had to change so I started saving small amounts each month and then increased the amount every few months. Was it tough - course it was! It's not easy to get something you want. That said by 33 I was able to afford a sizeable house with my other half with the full deposit between us (not using HTB) and get approved for a mortgage. I'm not being a matyr here but if you want something, you're going to have to give up other things. And during this time, my OH retrained and switched career into something completely different. It takes a bit of effort, course, but worth it now. Mortgage is not too mad per month and still have income to save/spend afterwards.

    unfortunately, when you introduce things such as increasing worker insecurity, in the form of increasing precarious nature of work, particularly for younger generations, rapidly rising housing prices, low wage inflation, etc etc etc you have a big problem.


  • Registered Users Posts: 286 ✭✭abcabc123123


    They can't get a mortgage - how can they buy an apartment?!
    They haven't checked if they can get one.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 68 ✭✭f@steddie


    Now though when house prices are totally crazy, a person in their 30s or 40s, unless also in a relationship (and even then there are no guarantees) or earning a very high salary (and given the limited window they have left for the duration of a mortgage repayment plan) doesn't have a great chance.

    Local authority affordable housing scheme is probably the best bet.
    A person in their 30s or 40s has been working for 10 to 25 years. If they can't save a deposit in that time then no bank should be lending them money.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,239 ✭✭✭Pussyhands


    Basically the take away from this thread is that if you want to buy a house you need to make it your entire life's focus, give up everything that costs money, work every waking hour and then eventually in the next decade you will have a deposit and can start looking at houses. Though you won't get your dream house, it'll be some apartment or crappy starter home.

    Wonderful.

    If you're on an average wage you're going to have an average home in an average location.

    It really is supply and demand. A house is the most expensive thing you'll buy in your life. If you could buy a great house easily while on 40k why would anyone want to earn 60k?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,331 ✭✭✭Keyzer


    MSVforever wrote: »
    It's possible. You’ll be surprised how much you can save. Obviously it depends on your circumstances.

    Are you living in Dublin? Do you live at home with your parents or do you have your own place?

    What is your current rent?

    What is your net salary?

    You can save a lot of money by doing the following:

    1. Bring your lunch to work
    2. Bring your own coffee to work
    3. Don't get takeaways and don't go to restaurants
    4. If you drink then don't go to pubs
    Have a few drinks at home instead.
    5. Quit smoking if applicable.
    6. If you live close enough to work then either get a taxsaver ticket or a bicycle
    7. Get rid of the car if applicable.
    8. Get rid of bill pay phone - pre pay instead
    9. Quit gym and workout outdoors instead
    10. Go on cheap holidays i.e. camping, air b&b, couch surfing etc
    11. Team up with a girlfriend / boyfriend so you can save more and cut utility bills etc

    Be frugal for a couple of years and you'll have a deposit in no time.

    Worked with a young chap who did all of the above other than 9 and 11 and he bought an apartment on his own last year - he set his mind to it and he did it. I was extremely impressed with his dedication.

    Its all about mind set and willingness to sacrifice for a long term goal.


  • Registered Users Posts: 896 ✭✭✭shenanagans


    It's simple really there's people that are good with money and then there's people who can't manage their money.

    If you're in the wrong category then you'll struggle to save.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,331 ✭✭✭Keyzer


    It's simple really there's people that are good with money and then there's people who can't manage their money.

    If you're in the wrong category then you'll struggle to save.

    Exactly. Simple changes can make a huge difference such as DD a % of salary into a savings account immediately after you get paid, preferably an account which is intentionally difficult to access (weeks notice to withdraw).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,207 ✭✭✭witchgirl26


    It's simple really there's people that are good with money and then there's people who can't manage their money.

    If you're in the wrong category then you'll struggle to save.

    But you can learn to manage your money. It's not something you should just go "oh well I'm bad at managing money so that's it for the rest of my life". It's a skill that requires effort be put in. Some people, like anything, will have a natural ability whereas others will have to work a bit more at it.

    I'm not great at managing money naturally but I've worked hard to get myself into a habit of saving, watching what I spend and being smarter with switching bills etc.

    Otherwise it's just another excuse.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,248 ✭✭✭Rowley Birkin QC


    I had a loan out for my college expenses. Once I finished and started working, I prioritized paying off the loan and so was pretty aggressive with the repayments and cutting out unnecessary spending. Once the loan was cleared, I started saving the same amount every month.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,904 ✭✭✭daheff


    Nomis21 wrote: »
    I came to Ireland 12 years ago at the age of 53 with nothing. I still have nothing but I have had a good time.

    You can't take it with you so just enjoy your life and stop getting fixated on house purchasing and a mortgage which will be a ball and chain round your neck for 25 years.

    Cant wait to see your pension plan. Most people need to have their mortgage paid by the time they retire because income drops by at least 30%...which should be the same proportion you are paying in mortgage/rent. If you still need to rent in retirement be sure you wont be having a good time. Especially if you need to keep moving every couple of years because the rent increases beyond what you can afford.
    Basically the take away from this thread is that if you want to buy a house you need to make it your entire life's focus, give up everything that costs money, work every waking hour and then eventually in the next decade you will have a deposit and can start looking at houses. Though you won't get your dream house, it'll be some apartment or crappy starter home.

    Wonderful.

    Take from this thread that you need to make some sacrifices for a while to save a deposit. The more sacrifices you can make, the quicker you have your deposit.
    Budget & stick to it. Decide how much you need to save each month and work around that figure. Even when you get your mortgage/home keep saving every month...otherwise what do you do if you lose your job/get sick/have kids to pay for?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,857 ✭✭✭professore


    Pussyhands wrote: »

    I honestly don't know what some people spend their money on as I'd struggle to spend all my salary in a month if I tried.

    Try having kids.


  • Registered Users Posts: 155 ✭✭dowhatyoulove


    Me and the hubby moved away - we both left college the year of the recession hit and tbh not one of our friends have bought a house yet - we are all early thirties.

    Been away a few years - managed to pay off wedding, had kids and now have about 40K put away for deposit. All within 5 years so it’s doable but it’s been a tough ride being away from Ireland.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,857 ✭✭✭professore


    daheff wrote: »
    Cant wait to see your pension plan. Most people need to have their mortgage paid by the time they retire because income drops by at least 30%...which should be the same proportion you are paying in mortgage/rent. If you still need to rent in retirement be sure you wont be having a good time. Especially if you need to keep moving every couple of years because the rent increases beyond what you can afford.

    Devil's advocate - you get dementia at 70. Your family put you in a nursing home. You live 10 years not knowing your own name. Meanwhile Sinn Fein win a majority in the Dail and tax on pension income and property tax on "rich" people like yourself - after all you are the "rich" they are talking about - goes through the roof to pay for people like our friend. You lose your house on the "fair" deal scheme. Or you get sick younger or lose your job and you eat through your savings and the bank take your house, and you still owe them 100 grand. Where is your "security" now?

    Our friend has a good social life, a few drinks with friends, doesn't have a car. Driverless cars are common now so that's not an issue. Medical card pays for healthcare. Gets social housing in new specially designed areas for retired people. His family visit regularly. Lives a full, healthy and happy life till 85 because he took care of his health and didn't stress out too much about everything.


  • Site Banned Posts: 160 ✭✭Kidkinobe


    Me and the hubby moved away - we both left college the year of the recession hit and tbh not one of our friends have bought a house yet - we are all early thirties.

    Been away a few years - managed to pay off wedding, had kids and now have about 40K put away for deposit. All within 5 years so it’s doable but it’s been a tough ride being away from Ireland.
    Thats why house prices will remain high and continue rising...there is a huge backlog of first time buyers wanting to get into a house and wages have only started to go up 2 years ago, lots of first home buyers will be in the 30/40 age group will be seriously looking for a home in 2 years, and they will be competing with the younger generation 20/30 years old wanting to buy the same houses.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,449 ✭✭✭✭pwurple


    Like the others said, go make some money. Work work work work work.

    When I was in my twenties, I worked for a corporate, and also did web design work at the weekends for some extra dosh. Even when I was in school, I had two or three jobs on the go. Working in a bookshop during the holidays, babysitting, and a weekend job at the cinema. Same all the way through my 30's. Worked a normal job, and did some extra contracts on top.

    Didn't spend on disposable crap, and that's it. Simple as.


    No inheritances, no windfalls. Just hard graft and a plan.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,783 ✭✭✭GoneHome


    This is primarily a problem if you're aspiration is to buy in one of the cities or in one of the commuter towns around Dublin. I live in rural county Limerick, under an hour from Limerick city and a little over that from Cork city. A lovely three-bedroom bungalow on an acre of land down the road from me sold a couple of months back for €125,000.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 201 ✭✭upinsmoke


    I'm on 39k, 500 goes to renting a one bed apartment. Rest is free cash.

    Saving roughly 1200 a month at the minute to buy a house. I'll get something around the 175K. In three years thats 43,200 saved.

    I'll be going down the county council route I reckon with the first time buyer option.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,997 ✭✭✭✭Cuddlesworth


    pwurple wrote: »
    Like the others said, go make some money. Work work work work work.

    You can work all you want but every holiday, takeaway and unnecessary expense sets you back.

    For us as a couple, it helped to work out the amount we needed, the amount we could in theory save and how long it would take to get there.

    When she wanted the holiday, did a quick check and it turned out it would set the savings plan back by 3 months. Killed that idea pretty quickly.




  • As you get older you should be deacumulating your assets not accumulating them.

    Rent an appartment and go to Amsterdam and get laid.

    Go to the pub and watch the football and order yourself a steak.

    Visit Australia and go surfing.

    Don't listen to all this frugal nonsense.

    You're only young once and when you're in a nursing home the HSE will take your house anyways.

    Aim to die with nothing but stories.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,628 ✭✭✭klaaaz


    Kidkinobe wrote: »
    Thats why house prices will remain high and continue rising...there is a huge backlog of first time buyers wanting to get into a house and wages have only started to go up 2 years ago, lots of first home buyers will be in the 30/40 age group will be seriously looking for a home in 2 years, and they will be competing with the younger generation 20/30 years old wanting to buy the same houses.

    Not necessarily, watch when interest rates go up and then prices will stall or even fall. Credit will become more expensive to obtain and savers for that house will be the bigger winners over someone who hardly saves.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 201 ✭✭upinsmoke


    As you get older you should be deacumulating your assets not accumulating them.

    Rent an appartment and go to Amsterdam and get laid.

    Go to the pub and watch the football and order yourself a steak.

    Visit Australia and go surfing.

    Don't listen to all this frugal nonsense.

    You're only young once and when you're in a nursing home the HSE will take your house anyways.

    Aim to die with nothing but stories.

    I'd rather sacrice two years of my life to be honest to have a house instead of pissing it away on rent, drink and things that are not necessities to be honest. Nice asset to have when you retire


  • Site Banned Posts: 160 ✭✭Kidkinobe


    klaaaz wrote: »
    Not necessarily, watch when interest rates go up and then prices will stall or even fall. Credit will become more expensive to obtain and savers for that house will be the bigger winners over someone who hardly saves.

    Interest rates have zero effect on the psyche of a first time buyer...especially ones that have been saving for 5/10 years to get a home. They want a home and they will pull out their own teeth to get it...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,449 ✭✭✭✭pwurple


    You can work all you want but every holiday, takeaway and unnecessary expense sets you back.

    For us as a couple, it helped to work out the amount we needed, the amount we could in theory save and how long it would take to get there.

    When she wanted the holiday, did a quick check and it turned out it would set the savings plan back by 3 months. Killed that idea pretty quickly.

    That's why the rest of my plan contained "don't buy disposable crap" and "have a plan".


    By the way, we travelled as well, as long as the plan was being met. Just changed the way we travelled. More road trips, camping and hostels, less 5 star or package resorts.


    Some of the current peeps seem to think a 500 euro handbag, 1000 euro phone and 5 star weekends away are an expected basic. I didn't start doing that (well, not the handbag or the phone yet, or maybe never tbh!), until I was nearly 40.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,140 ✭✭✭James Bond Junior


    Some of the responses here are reckless. Spend what you like and the government will pick up the tab later. No wonder the country is funked when there is a sizeable portion of the population devoid of personal responsibility. Scary.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 139 ✭✭alexmalalex


    The OP has obviously provided enough information on his/her circumstances to make a realistic assessment.

    Most of the responses offered are self-righteous and ignore the trade-offs that are required in life IMO. In this regard, I think you should pay heed to Baz Luhrmann: "Advice is a form of nostalgia dispensing it is a way of fishing the past from the disposal, wiping it off painting over the ugly parts and recycling it for more than it's worth" Its not that people are telling you untruths, its just that they are exaggerating the truth, to rationalize their own choices. They also want to make themselves feel good. Once they have acquired their little box, believe me, it makes them feel good that you can't and that you have to suffer to try. I mean, come on, they are working so hard that they have the time to post on boards on a Monday morning. Complete BS.

    The truth is that buying a house inside the M50 is now out of bounds for most of the population. The only ones doing it are those who (a) have net income of 100k+ per year, (b) have wealth, (c) have acquired the property from family, or (d) are drug dealers, criminals, or taxi drivers :). The houses at the fringe of the M50 are now seeing rapid inflation of house prices due to the fact that the folks who would usually buy a house for half a million, can't afford the three quarter of a million price tag. So their strategy is to move to less desirable locations, and that is why house prices are being driven up for houses that would ordinarily be worth 200k-300k. In turn, the people who would pay for houses in the 200-300k range are being driven out of Dublin...and so the cycle continues.

    So, in all realism, living like a monk is unlikely to make a big difference, and the people on this forum know that. Best to look outside Dublin, or better yet outside Ireland. Or just wait for the next crash - which is imminent.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,168 ✭✭✭Ursus Horribilis


    Having the discipline to save up the deposit is an invaluable life skill for after you buy your own place. Many people, including yours truly, will tell you that the first couple of years are the toughest. Even if you don't go mad spending money, getting a house up and running is surprisingly expensive. That's before you add in extras like maintenance, replacing white goods, TV licence, property tax etc.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,559 ✭✭✭DublinWriter


    pwurple wrote: »
    Like the others said, go make some money. Work work work work work.
    ..and forget all about live, live, live.

    There is something bonkers going on, not just in Ireland, but in UK and US culture generally.

    I don't know if many of you remember the setup for most of the 70's, but only one parent had to work outside the house.

    My parents bought their own house through the Dublin corporation rent-to-buy scheme. I think the house originally cost £4000 back in 74, and it was a 30 year scheme with repayments of £5 a week right to the end of the term.

    These days everyone seems to be an indentured mortgage slave, both parents working like dogs to pay off a mortgage and pay to have the kids in a creche from 8am to 6pm.


  • Registered Users Posts: 286 ✭✭abcabc123123


    ..and forget all about live, live, live.

    There is something bonkers going on, not just in Ireland, but in UK and US culture generally.

    I don't know if many of you remember the setup for most of the 70's, but only one parent had to work outside the house.

    My parents bought their own house through the Dublin corporation rent-to-buy scheme. I think the house originally cost £4000 back in 74, and it was a 30 year scheme with repayments of £5 a week right to the end of the term.

    These days everyone seems to be an indentured mortgage slave, both parents working like dogs to pay off a mortgage and pay to have the kids in a creche from 8am to 6pm.
    Only one parent /could/ work up until 73 so prices obviously could only rise so far. My parents had to sell our home in the early 90s and downsize because high interest rates and college fees were crushing them. A significant rise in housing costs relative to income has occurred in recent years for sure but let's not pretend that people didn't have housing difficulties in the past as well.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,168 ✭✭✭Ursus Horribilis


    How do people in continental Europe pay their rent once they retire? The ones who've rented all their lives?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,903 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    Only one parent /could/ work up until 73 so prices obviously could only rise so far. My parents had to sell our home in the early 90s and downsize because high interest rates and college fees were crushing them. A significant rise in housing costs relative to income has occurred in recent years for sure but let's not pretend that people didn't have housing difficulties in the past as well.


    Each generation has its difficulties in obtaining access to their most critical of needs, such as housing, it would be disingenuous to say otherwise, but our current situation is somewhat disturbing to watch, with very little acceptance that something serious is going wrong. This has the potential to become a serious problem for all, including current homeowners, including landlords.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,449 ✭✭✭✭pwurple


    *eyeroll* Sure, I'm dead already. I've never been across africa, syria, or iceland,or lived in the US and switzerland. Never abseiled a glacier, never saw a sunrise over a hawaiian volcano. Never had a family, never rode motorbikes across europe. Never stood on standby in Austin texas for 40 hours waiting for jumpseats to be available, and heard some crazy stories. Except, wait, yes I did all those things. Within my means, while working.



    Only one parent works in our house too. To do that, you need to spend less. Kinda like the 70's. :D


    Back in the 70's (and yes, I was there too) we all had way less. We had one car, that didn't have back seats. Family of 7. All shared bedrooms. No mobiles, no internet, no meals out, no cafe coffee, no holidays to anywhere on an airplane. I didn't see an elephant in real life until I was 24. The Zoo? Don't be silly, that's crazy money.


    You want more, like people generally have now, you pay more for it. That's how it works.

    There was a thread in PI recently where the whole of boards seemed to think it was ludicrous that a guys new girlfriend didn't think a telly and a subscription was necessary in her house. She's right, it's a luxury. I remember my parents buying their first one.


    And actually, if you want to be a bit more like people who you think have what you want... a house, a lifestyle, whatever, read and pay attention to what they say about getting there. Learn from their experience. Also also learn from people who f-ed it up. Most of the time they are bitter , but you can learn from that too.

    I used to read heaps of books on this when I was in my twenties, and now, I read a good bit on FatFIRE, and LEANFire, for planning my retirement. People who have money, don't spend it on unimportant stuff, and have learned how to earn it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 68 ✭✭f@steddie


    These days everyone seems to be an indentured mortgage slave, both parents working like dogs to pay off a mortgage and pay to have the kids in a creche from 8am to 6pm.

    There are many people who live a better version of the life your parents lead in the 70s. Good jobs and sensible spending. Manageable mortgages. More life experience due to the greater opportunities available now (for travel etc.).

    Not all are indentured mortgage slaves.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,704 ✭✭✭Nermal


    professore wrote: »
    You lose your house on the "fair" deal scheme.
    You're only young once and when you're in a nursing home the HSE will take your house anyways.

    11.25% of it: https://www2.hse.ie/services/fair-deal-scheme/financial-assessment-your-payment-towards-care.html

    At least make your spendthrift scenarios plausible.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,184 ✭✭✭riclad


    The simple answer is save as much as you can ,
    houses in rural towns are still relatively cheap, 70k and up for a 2bed unit.Look on daft.ie , dublin,meath etc
    So it sounds like in your 20,s you changed jobs alot.
    You went to college, now houses are more expensive.
    and you had no interest in getting a 25 year mortgage at that time .
    my friend bought a large caravan ,in a trailer park 40minutes from dublin .
    He works in dublin , he lives with his girfriend in an apartment 4 days a week.
    He paids a basic fee for acess to water and pays for his esb bill .
    I think he paid 27k for his unit, its static ,not movable ,
    similar to the picture i,ll upload here .
    he has space to park his car .
    He can stay there 12 months a year , 7 days a week if he wants .
    Theres about 20 units on the site .

    Banks lend about 3.5 times your salary ,if you have the deposit needed .The amount of the deposit depends on the price of the house,
    it,s usually about 10-20 per cent of the loan.
    The current situation is new in that there,s loads of jobs, we are in a boom, but theres not enough building going on to satisfy demand,
    rents are high , In citys house prices have gone up, meanwhile the average wage has not gone up as fast as house price,s .
    In 2007 there was a crash, so alot of builders went out of business , theres a shortage of building workers in ireland .
    Its easier to make money building large office,s in dublin than building 3 bed house,s .
    Its a bit ridiculous to worry about buying a house because of what might happen when you are 70 or 80 .No one knows .


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,796 ✭✭✭spurshero


    Pussyhands wrote: »
    As someone who ticks most of those boxes....

    If you think smoking, buying lunch at work, cycling instead of driving to work, working outdoors instead of the gym is so much of a sacrifice that you "may aswell be dead" then I don't think there's any helping you.

    OP gave you a list of cost cutting measures, you don't need to do them all.

    Just to be clear I’m in my 40 s and own my own house . It’s the people in my 20s I feel sorry for . My .....may as well be dead comment was half joking half serious . It’s not possible for everybody to cycle to work or with the amount of rain we get here to exercise outside all the time . I know owning a house is important but so is having a bit of fun in your 20s And early 30s and fun Costs money in most cases . Each to there own though


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,495 ✭✭✭✭eviltwin


    ..and forget all about live, live, live.

    There is something bonkers going on, not just in Ireland, but in UK and US culture generally.

    I don't know if many of you remember the setup for most of the 70's, but only one parent had to work outside the house.

    My parents bought their own house through the Dublin corporation rent-to-buy scheme. I think the house originally cost £4000 back in 74, and it was a 30 year scheme with repayments of £5 a week right to the end of the term.

    These days everyone seems to be an indentured mortgage slave, both parents working like dogs to pay off a mortgage and pay to have the kids in a creche from 8am to 6pm.

    I'd rather be a slave to my mortgage than someone else's.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 68 ✭✭f@steddie


    spurshero wrote: »
    It’s not possible for everybody to cycle to work or with the amount of rain we get here to exercise outside all the time .

    We don't actually get that much rain. I read that if you cycled to work every day of the year in Dublin you'd get wet 20 times on average. (No link to support that comment). Anecdotally this is pretty spot on.

    Of course if you're cycling or exercising your probably going to be wet / sweaty anyway so rain is irrelevant.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,616 ✭✭✭✭mariaalice


    Maybe the op cant buy in their thirties but maybe they can buy at 40 they would still get a 25-year mortgage.

    It helps if they are not the sort of person who associates thrift with meanness.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,321 ✭✭✭Brego888


    You need to start saving early. Anyone in their early 20's now reading this just start saving now even a small amount. It needs to be part of your routine, something you have to do and can't avoid. I still lived it up, loads of nights out, holidays away, nice car etc. But still topping away at the savings year on year.

    Before I was 30 I had a good deposit saved and bought an apartment. Mortgage repayments were reasonable and crucially I continued to save. Now in my mid 30's myself and my partner have enough saved for a 20% deposit and an upgrade to a house.

    Obviously in your 30's it's not too late to start saving now but it will take longer to get there. Start saving as early as you can people is the key. It doesn't mean you have to live like a monk.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 68 ✭✭f@steddie


    Brego888 wrote: »
    You need to start saving early. Anyone in their earky 20's now reading this just start saving now even a small amount. It needs to be part of your routine, something you have to do and can't avoid. I still lived it up, loads of nights out, holidays away, nice car etc. But still topping away at the savings year on year.

    Before I was 30 I had a good deposit saved and bought an apartment. Mortgage repayments were reasonable and crucially I continued to save. Now in my mid 30's myself and my partner have enough saved for a 20% deposit and an upgrade to a house.

    Obviously in your 30's it's not too late to start saving now but it will take longer to get there. Start saving as early as you can people is the key. It doesn't mean you have to live like a monk.

    Fair play. If you can save 2 deposits without living like a monk there's no reason why others can't save for one deposit.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,239 ✭✭✭Pussyhands


    ..and forget all about live, live, live.

    There is something bonkers going on, not just in Ireland, but in UK and US culture generally.

    I don't know if many of you remember the setup for most of the 70's, but only one parent had to work outside the house.

    My parents bought their own house through the Dublin corporation rent-to-buy scheme. I think the house originally cost £4000 back in 74, and it was a 30 year scheme with repayments of £5 a week right to the end of the term.

    These days everyone seems to be an indentured mortgage slave, both parents working like dogs to pay off a mortgage and pay to have the kids in a creche from 8am to 6pm.

    And? In the 70's you wouldn't have had Ireland v England in professional rugby games at a top class stadium on your doorstep.

    Back in the 90's there was one car per house, now both adults have one.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,234 ✭✭✭bullpost


    How do people in continental Europe pay their rent once they retire? The ones who've rented all their lives?

    Renting more the norm there and so cost of renting is affordable. I think I remember watching a programme on Germany and there the pension funds get invested back into the housing stock.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,997 ✭✭✭✭Cuddlesworth


    f@steddie wrote: »
    Fair play. If you can save 2 deposits without living like a monk there's no reason why others can't save for one deposit.

    Pretty much, I blew money out my ass during my 20's. Which meant I had to live like a monk for a few years.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,264 ✭✭✭✭jester77


    I always put away a fix % of salary from when I started working in my 20's, wasn't saving for anything in particular. Initially it started as a rainy day fund. By the time I hit mid-30's and decided to purchase a house I had a 6 figure sum available.

    I moved out of home at 17, partied every weekend, got to travel the world, worked in different countries and had everything I wanted within reason. There's no point waiting until 3 or 4 years before you want to buy a house to start saving. Save from the start, it will be small in the beginning but as your career progresses the amount will start getting a lot larger over time.


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  • Site Banned Posts: 20,686 ✭✭✭✭Weepsie


    spurshero wrote: »
    Just to be clear I’m in my 40 s and own my own house . It’s the people in my 20s I feel sorry for . My .....may as well be dead comment was half joking half serious . It’s not possible for everybody to cycle to work or with the amount of rain we get here to exercise outside all the time . I know owning a house is important but so is having a bit of fun in your 20s And early 30s and fun Costs money in most cases . Each to there own though

    As someone else alluded to, we don't actually get that much, especially on the east coast.

    People get as wet, walking a few hundred metres from their car, bus, train as they would cycling.

    Rain is absolutely no barrier to running, jogging and other outdoor sports. If it were, we'd be cave people.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,991 ✭✭✭✭NIMAN


    Your skin is waterproof.

    Or the famous quote goes, "there's no such thing as bad weather, just bad clothes".


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,381 ✭✭✭Yurt2


    What I want to know is when the a*rse falls out of the market again (perhaps due to Brexit or another global economic shock), will Ireland actually move to reform how we deal with property and our property obsession? Will we have the balls to institute a land value tax? Will the state intervene and have an agency to construct affordable housing? Will the people who are in favour of rapid repossession of family homes think as much when they can't make their mortgage repayments?

    Questions, questions. I'm no economist, but if there's another multi-year recession, I have very little faith in the political class and people at large grasping the nettle and dealing with why we have such an erratic 'market'.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,280 ✭✭✭✭Eric Cartman


    ..and forget all about live, live, live.

    There is something bonkers going on, not just in Ireland, but in UK and US culture generally.

    I don't know if many of you remember the setup for most of the 70's, but only one parent had to work outside the house.

    My parents bought their own house through the Dublin corporation rent-to-buy scheme. I think the house originally cost £4000 back in 74, and it was a 30 year scheme with repayments of £5 a week right to the end of the term.

    These days everyone seems to be an indentured mortgage slave, both parents working like dogs to pay off a mortgage and pay to have the kids in a creche from 8am to 6pm.

    in those days over 75% of mortgages were single applicant, the wife was a dependent and people were having over 2.5x more kids. The market value of housing adjusts to whats available, we're not going back to those times unless you can wholesale convince women not to work , return to being stay at home mothers and have more children.

    that and we have added 2 million people to out population, in 2016 40% of ireland was living rurally, in the 70s it was over 60% .

    The real question for us now , is how do we either re-ignite rural Ireland and peoples desire to live there or how do we increase availability of affordable housing in urban areas, what do we specifically do for housing for single income applicants ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,652 ✭✭✭Wildly Boaring


    Yurt! wrote: »
    What I want to know is when the a*rse falls out of the market again (perhaps due to Brexit or another global economic shock), will Ireland actually move to reform how we deal with property and our property obsession? Will we have the balls to institute a land value tax? Will the state intervene and have an agency to construct affordable housing? Will the people who are in favour of rapid repossession of family homes think as much when they can't make their mortgage repayments?

    Questions, questions. I'm no economist, but if there's another multi-year recession, I have very little faith in the political class and people at large grasping the nettle and dealing with why we have such an erratic 'market'.

    I'd be all for affordable housing, built at cost. For low earners. Low earners then given very low interest rate on government backed loan.

    I'd be very against tax money paying for those who won't work and won't move more than 30 mins from mammy.

    I'm against repossession of family homes, once mortgage holder is making repayments. I am totally in favour of repossession of houses in roscommon belonging to total chancer, scumbags who will not pay local suppliers or the taxman.

    I firmly believe Dublin is in a bubble right now. Buying in such conditions should not be an aim in life. Saving like hell in anticipation of the next fall in prices should be priority.

    The bubble may not be cheap credit but any developer and contractor is going to take advantage of the current low supply to drive up profits.


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