Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi all! We have been experiencing an issue on site where threads have been missing the latest postings. The platform host Vanilla are working on this issue. A workaround that has been used by some is to navigate back from 1 to 10+ pages to re-sync the thread and this will then show the latest posts. Thanks, Mike.
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

Rent freeze?

1356

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,625 ✭✭✭Fol20


    beauf wrote: »
    That's what everything done in the last 20yrs has achieved. Why not follow the populist route.

    The government are so well known for being efficient with spending and doing stuff for the good fo nation rather than plots to get votes.

    I would never count on the government to help you. It’s a bonus if they do but it’s better to count on yourself and I don’t see this going well if we go down this route.

    We need remove as much stuff from the government as possible. Just look at other nations where they have a large public workforce and how well their economy performs.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    Fol20 wrote: »
    ...I don’t see this going well if we go down this route....

    ireland is 20 yrs going down this route. Bit late now. Horse has disappeared over the horizon.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,279 ✭✭✭The Student


    I'm a tenant and I'm definitely in favour of making it easier and quicker for landlords to evict non-paying and nuisance tenants. However, reducing taxes on rents won't reduce rents in any way. If you decreased taxes for landlords tomorrow, my rent will stay the same and any new rentals that come on the market will still be at a crazy high price.

    If you extend the rent a room scheme to landlords and say no tax on for example rents up to €1000 but anything over that you pay tax on it all then you only pay €1000 rent, the landlord gets the €1000 and the state gets nothing.

    If you were paying €2000 in rent you are now paying €1000 you can save the other €1000 towards a deposit for your own place should you wish to buy.

    With the above the landlord is no worse off, the tenant is better off to the tune of €1000


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,625 ✭✭✭Fol20


    If you extend the rent a room scheme to landlords and say no tax on for example rents up to €1000 but anything over that you pay tax on it all then you only pay €1000 rent, the landlord gets the €1000 and the state gets nothing.

    If you were paying €2000 in rent you are now paying €1000 you can save the other €1000 towards a deposit for your own place should you wish to buy.

    With the above the landlord is no worse off, the tenant is better off to the tune of €1000

    What would you do with items you expense in your example?


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


    beauf wrote: »
    ireland is 20 yrs going down this route. Bit late now. Horse has disappeared over the horizon.

    Not sure what the fatalism contributes. :confused:

    Rents are too high because there are no units available, so might as well make it worse because you don't give a toss about the people on the streets or stuck with their parents for years?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,279 ✭✭✭The Student


    Fol20 wrote: »
    What would you do with items you expense in your example?

    You would get a tax credit for the expenses which could be used against your tax from your employment.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    pwurple wrote: »
    Not sure what the fatalism contributes. :confused:

    Rents are too high because there are no units available, so might as well make it worse because you don't give a toss about the people on the streets or stuck with their parents for years?

    The populist opinion would be that "professional Landlords" is what's needs.

    So therefore investing in them, would be helping everyone.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    Its interesting how the small LLs are always the bad guy, regardless if they invest in housing, or the leave the market. Its a no win scenario.

    That in a time of extreme shortage that the vast majority of those providing supply are being encouraged to leave it, and those providing the most expensive housing are encourage to enter it, should raise questions. But it doesn't.

    Those that are shouting loudest, and having most influence are those providing no housing at all.

    Not to mention copying policy from other countries even after they've been shown to make the problem worse.
    The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,315 ✭✭✭nthclare


    The days of the common man making a killing out of bricks and mortar will be set 8n stone.

    I've mentioned my friend who's an actuary in a few posts over my time on boards and he used to laugh at people buying houses thinking they'll be set for life, living off the rent...

    I think the present moment is concrete enough evidence to the testimony of sheer gombeenism and greed.

    These guys pushing you to part with your cash are not out for your good that's for sure.

    Because it's free money for the system including huge interest.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    Pension proved to be unreliable. Now property. What next.


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 35,100 Mod ✭✭✭✭AlmightyCushion


    If you extend the rent a room scheme to landlords and say no tax on for example rents up to €1000 but anything over that you pay tax on it all then you only pay €1000 rent, the landlord gets the €1000 and the state gets nothing.

    If you were paying €2000 in rent you are now paying €1000 you can save the other €1000 towards a deposit for your own place should you wish to buy.

    With the above the landlord is no worse off, the tenant is better off to the tune of €1000

    I assume this works on a per property basis? If so, it doesn't work. What will happen is people will start splitting properties up into multiple different units and charging €1,000 a month for them. Now, that 2 bedroom house can earn €2,000 a month tax free.

    Or they will rent it on a room by room basis and register all the rooms as individual units. Now, that 3 bedroom apartment can earn up to €3,000 a month tax free. Sure if someone inspects it then it will be noticed what is going on but the chances of that are small so people will definitely take the risk.

    That's only 2 potential ways around it that I can think of off the top of my head. If it was actually implemented, then I'm sure people would start coming up with even more creative ways around it to increase their tax free earnings.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    Renting a room works OK for some Landlords, particular those who like to micromanage.
    But most seem to think its problematic and avoid it. That was my impression on previous threads on it.
    Most of the hassle and micromanaging, isn't an issue if the LL is living in the same property.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,063 ✭✭✭riemann


    Fol20 wrote: »
    You keep hearing figures of 24k average rent on the morning show. Not sure if this is accurate or not but Doyle should have rebutted this with a working example. Let’s say the ll get 24k. We have mortgage payments of 17k incl principle pay down. Then maintenance coupled with a tax could leave you at a break even point in terms of cash flow.

    This post here sums up all that is wrong with Ireland.

    Someone complaining that they aren't making an annual profit, while someone else is paying off their loan, for an asset that they will own when the loan is repaid?

    It would be funny if it wasn't so sad.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,744 ✭✭✭marieholmfan


    Fol20 wrote: »
    You keep hearing figures of 24k average rent on the morning show. Not sure if this is accurate or not but Doyle should have rebutted this with a working example. Let’s say the ll get 24k. We have mortgage payments of 17k incl principle pay down. Then maintenance coupled with a tax could leave you at a break even point in terms of cash flow.
    Tough Luck at the end of the process you own the asset. The state should ensure that no landlord with an outstanding mortgage can break even.


  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 35,100 Mod ✭✭✭✭AlmightyCushion


    nthclare wrote: »
    The days of the common man making a killing out of bricks and mortar will be set 8n stone.

    I've mentioned my friend who's an actuary in a few posts over my time on boards and he used to laugh at people buying houses thinking they'll be set for life, living off the rent...

    I think the present moment is concrete enough evidence to the testimony of sheer gombeenism and greed.

    These guys pushing you to part with your cash are not out for your good that's for sure.

    Because it's free money for the system including huge interest.
    beauf wrote: »
    Pension proved to be unreliable. Now property. What next.
    beauf wrote: »
    Renting a room works OK for some Landlords, particular those who like to micromanage.
    But most seem to think its problematic and avoid it. That was my impression on previous threads on it.
    Most of the hassle and micromanaging, isn't an issue if the LL is living in the same property.

    They would do it if it meant they could get all the income was tax free with little chance of getting caught.

    Regardless, his idea is stupid and won't work at reducing rents. Best case scenario, all properties currently rented below €1,000 a month or above ~€2,000 a month stay the same. Anything over €1,000 but close to it will probably drop in price alright but pretty much everything else between the €1,000 and €2,000 bracket will just get increased.

    So anyone renting a property that is paying rent of €1001 to maybe €1500 a month will be better off. Everyone else will either be paying the same or worse off. I know a few people paying nearly €2,000 for the places they live. His scheme will not result in them getting their rent reduced. Not to mention, this will massively reduce the tax take for the government.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,453 ✭✭✭Ray Palmer


    There is some seriously questionable logic being used to justify any further price controls on rent. The figures used to say rent has increased include newly built properties. These prices are not an increase and existing tenants aren't paying more as a result. There are still a lot of tenants on below market rents and in RPZ where it will take many years to reach current market rates.
    The RPZ we were assured would be 4 years but they changed the law again to extend it another year.
    Just read that 1 in 5 homes bought this year were new builds. So there still is a massive under supply of property being built. Prices are stalled so not a great incentive to build or even start looking for finance to build.

    Rent freeze isn't needed but if they bring it in the will have to cut all the other clauses out like refurbishment, family need and sale of property.

    You would need to crazy to think this would work or that it would actually make a difference. Effectively everyone has a 2 year rent freeze as is.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,625 ✭✭✭Fol20


    riemann wrote: »
    This post here sums up all that is wrong with Ireland.

    Someone complaining that they aren't making an annual profit, while someone else is paying off their loan, for an asset that they will own when the loan is repaid?

    It would be funny if it wasn't so sad.


    If rents stayed like they are well and good but over the span of 20-30 years, prices will go up and down, how about the previous 10 years during the recession when rent was half of what it is now, combined with costs going up on average of 25pc. It would be funny if it wasnt sad.

    The whole point of investing to always look at your capital and if it can be better invested elsewhere. Why invest in property if your not making money, thats the whole point.

    It isnt someone else paying for your house either. A ll made a calculated risk with their cash and assets that they could make money doing x and y. If it was so easy why dont you try it or why doesnt everyone else do it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,625 ✭✭✭Fol20


    Tough Luck at the end of the process you own the asset. The state should ensure that no landlord with an outstanding mortgage can break even.

    So are you saying that a business should not make a profit or break even at a minimum. I suspect you have never owned a business or have a failed business in that case.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 23,656 ✭✭✭✭ted1


    I’ve just drafted a rent review notices. I was happy to let themBe for the past while, but if freezes are in the way. I’ll be putting them up to the max permitted.


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 35,100 Mod ✭✭✭✭AlmightyCushion


    Fol20 wrote: »
    So are you saying that a business should not make a profit or break even at a minimum. I suspect you have never owned a business or have a failed business in that case.

    There is a difference between profitable and cash flow positive. A person letting out a property could have to top up the rent to pay the mortgage and yet still be profitable because a large chunk of the mortgage payments are going towards paying off the house. That equity you are building up every month by paying the mortgage is profit. You just choose not to see it as such.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,625 ✭✭✭Fol20


    There is a difference between profitable and cash flow positive. A person letting out a property could have to top up the rent to pay the mortgage and yet still be profitable because a large chunk of the mortgage payments are going towards paying off the house. That equity you are building up every month by paying the mortgage is profit. You just choose not to see it as such.

    Tbh, if you look at any other business, they all need to be cashflow positive. Yes, principle pay down is part of the profit but this cannot be used until the property is sold which could be 2-30 years down the line.

    Try asking a small business owner to have negative cashflow for 20 years but the potential headaches and risks that go along with this with a chance that he may come out ahead when he is close to retirement.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,624 ✭✭✭✭meeeeh


    Fol20 wrote: »
    Tbh, if you look at any other business, they all need to be cashflow positive. Yes, principle pay down is part of the profit but this cannot be used until the property is sold which could be 2-30 years down the line.

    Try asking a small business owner to have negative cashflow for 20 years but the potential headaches and risks that go along with this with a chance that he may come out ahead when he is close to retirement.

    Well you can buy rental property outright and then you will have no issues with cashflow. If you overstretch yourself buying investment property you are not entitled to higher rents and lower taxes just to maintain your lifestyle. Market or this case government will dictate your rental income not how much you need to cover mortgage repayments.


  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 35,100 Mod ✭✭✭✭AlmightyCushion


    Fol20 wrote: »
    Tbh, if you look at any other business, they all need to be cashflow positive. Yes, principle pay down is part of the profit but this cannot be used until the property is sold which could be 2-30 years down the line.

    Try asking a small business owner to have negative cashflow for 20 years but the potential headaches and risks that go along with this with a chance that he may come out ahead when he is close to retirement.

    Most businesses aren't based on being mortgaged to the hilt. Most businesses don't have large amounts of their income going towards capital payments on the mortgage. Property is a long term investment. If people see that and understand that then it can be a great investment. Because of the huge debt required (relatively speaking compared to the value of the asset) and the large capital payments it should be almost expected to be cash flow negative.

    Let's take a simple example.

    Say, you have a property worth €500k with a 25 year mortgage on it for €450k. The rent exactly covers the mortgage, tax and all other expenses. You don't have to put any extra money into this investment but you also don't get anything extra out of it either. This continues for the entire length of the mortgage. After 25 years, your 50k investment would now result in you having complete ownership of an asset that was worth 500k before any capital appreciation. With 25 years worth of capital appreciation, the property could be worth a lot more. How can you not see that this is an excellent investment? To expect to be getting cashflow every month from this investment as well is just ridiculous.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,625 ✭✭✭Fol20


    meeeeh wrote: »
    Well you can buy rental property outright and then you will have no issues with cashflow. If you overstretch yourself buying investment property you are not entitled to higher rents and lower taxes just to maintain your lifestyle. Market or this case government will dictate your rental income not how much you need to cover mortgage repayments.

    Most companies borrow money so no point even doing that as an example. Im not advocating for lower taxes. I want a free market to operate where the price will naturally settle.

    So what do you suggest to fix the issue. Government interference is not going to fix the issue as anything they have done for the past decade has made it worse.

    The one and only issue here is supply vs demand. Supply is decreasing and demand is increasing. How do you solve this? You may not like ll but they are people that offer supply. If you alienate these people supply will decrease like what we are seeing now.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,625 ✭✭✭Fol20


    Most businesses aren't based on being mortgaged to the hilt. Most businesses don't have large amounts of their income going towards capital payments on the mortgage. Property is a long term investment. If people see that and understand that then it can be a great investment. Because of the huge debt required (relatively speaking compared to the value of the asset) and the large capital payments it should be almost expected to be cash flow negative.

    Let's take a simple example.

    Say, you have a property worth €500k with a 25 year mortgage on it for €450k. The rent exactly covers the mortgage, tax and all other expenses. You don't have to put any extra money into this investment but you also don't get anything extra out of it either. This continues for the entire length of the mortgage. After 25 years, your 50k investment would now result in you having complete ownership of an asset that was worth 500k before any capital appreciation. With 25 years worth of capital appreciation, the property could be worth a lot more. How can you not see that this is an excellent investment? To expect to be getting cashflow every month from this investment as well is just ridiculous.


    Just as an FYI, you cannot do your example as ll need a max ltv of 70pc unless refi. So it would be 500k house with a 350k mortgage.

    Your calculation also doesnt take into account risk, maintenance and your own work and steady rent.

    -You could have a tenant that doesnt pay rent for a year.
    -A tenant that damages the property to the tune of 50k - yes i have seen then.
    -Over the span of 25 years, everything in the property will need to be replaced so you would be talking thousands in work also.
    -Mortgage payments remain the same however rent goes up and DOWN. more recently rent is much higher but if you look back to 2012, rent was half of what it is now.
    -As mentioned already, if property was such a lucrative and excellent investment, more would be investing in it, yet we are seeing a decline in available rentals - why is that?
    -Yes i do expect positive cashflow for the risk i take on it. i could loose everything if i dont make payments so i want to be compensated for this. Capital appreciation and cashflow to at least break even incl tax.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 137 ✭✭burkey2k0


    Say, you have a property worth €500k with a 25 year mortgage on it for €450k. The rent exactly covers the mortgage, tax and all other expenses. You don't have to put any extra money into this investment but you also don't get anything extra out of it either. This continues for the entire length of the mortgage. After 25 years, your 50k investment would now result in you having complete ownership of an asset that was worth 500k before any capital appreciation. With 25 years worth of capital appreciation, the property could be worth a lot more. How can you not see that this is an excellent investment? To expect to be getting cashflow every month from this investment as well is just ridiculous.

    Agree with your point, but Just to nitpick. It's a good deal, but not that amazing a deal when you take into the cost of the mortgage over the years, even when you take into account capital appreciation.

    At a capital appreciation of let's say 2% (which is the average over the past number of decades) and a mortgage interest rate of 3% over those 25 years, the asset will appreciate to approx. €824,000, but the total mortgage cost would be approx. €640,000. Plus your initial €50,000 which is a total €690,000 cost of the asset.

    So a gain of €134,000 over 25 years in your example, not €500,000. so just under €5,500 a year.

    A return of approx. 11% annually on your investment.

    (I've left myself open now for people to nitpick at me, please be gentle! :) )


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 17,642 Mod ✭✭✭✭Graham


    burkey2k0 wrote: »
    (I've left myself open now for people to nitpick at me, please be gentle! :) )

    Have BTL mortgage rated halved recently burkey2k0?

    ;)


  • Registered Users Posts: 137 ✭✭burkey2k0


    Graham wrote: »
    Have BTL mortgage rated halved recently burkey2k0?

    ;)

    Haha, oh so if everything was above board?! interesting! Okay lets account for Fol20 aswell with the Buy to let ratio, meaning €350,000 being borrowed at 4.5% (I had a quick check on Bonkers.ie ;) ), and an investment of €150,000

    Scenario does changes!

    Mortgage cost €554k, plus initial €150k is €704k as opposed to €690k in the simplified version.

    So a gain of €120,000 over 25 years in this example. so €4,800 a year.

    A return of approx. 3.2% annually on your investment...A financial adviser would probably not advise you to take this option...

    Also! Mortgage on this would be approx €1800...The rent to charge to get you even on this I will leave to someone with more time. €2500 to €3000 maybe? Even this market that's a stretch.


  • Posts: 11,614 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    ted1 wrote: »
    I’ve just drafted a rent review notices. I was happy to let themBe for the past while, but if freezes are in the way. I’ll be putting them up to the max permitted.

    Well done government.

    The last time they tried to improves things my rent went up by 8% overnight.

    Any times they try to fix things they just make it worse.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 17,642 Mod ✭✭✭✭Graham


    burkey2k0 wrote: »
    So a gain of €120,000 over 25 years in this example. so €4,800 a year.

    A return of approx. 3.2% annually on your investment...A financial adviser would probably not advise you to take this option...

    Is that figure before CGT?


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 137 ✭✭burkey2k0


    Graham wrote: »
    Is that figure before CGT?

    Probably brings it down to a 2% return. What idiot would be a landlord?! :D


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 17,642 Mod ✭✭✭✭Graham


    burkey2k0 wrote: »
    Probably brings it down to a 2% return. What idiot would be a landlord?! :D

    Inflation adjusted?

    :pac:


  • Registered Users Posts: 137 ✭✭burkey2k0


    Graham wrote: »
    Inflation adjusted?

    :pac:

    Haha, Mercy!

    Edit:....But that would actually improve the situation...time value of money and all. Paying off an asset over 25 years, your mortgagee payments stay the same, but the value of the money you're paying it with goes down.

    This really requires some sort of graph!...I am not doing a graph.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 17,642 Mod ✭✭✭✭Graham


    Ahhh go on, I haven't even started on the risk side, void periods, etc. etc. etc.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 23,656 ✭✭✭✭ted1


    Well done government.

    The last time they tried to improves things my rent went up by 8% overnight.

    Any times they try to fix things they just make it worse.

    Actually it was the opposition


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    Tough Luck at the end of the process you own the asset. The state should ensure that no landlord with an outstanding mortgage can break even.

    Then there's no incentive to to rent.
    Without cash-flow, there is nothing to pay for the on going expenses and maintenance of a property or run the business.

    You can just buy property, and never rent it. Let it appreciate.
    I know a good few people who did exactly that. Let family and friends use it intermittently but basically sat empty for a decade or two. Then sold it once they retire.

    Which is a problem if you outsource the provision of rental property in its entirety and remove all incentive to rent.

    The people this is a problem for, is the people looking to rent.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,904 ✭✭✭mgn


    Well done government.

    The last time they tried to improves things my rent went up by 8% overnight.

    Any times they try to fix things they just make it worse.

    That's the problem, i'm not in a RPZ so i normally don't increase the rent if i have good tenants, the problem now is if this rent freeze goes through, i'm going to have to up the rent because i don't know what else these idiots in government are going to do next.

    The landlord in this country is being made the scapegoat for the housing crisis, hammer the landlord every time, it takes the blame of that incompetent fool Murphy.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    ted1 wrote: »
    Actually it was the opposition

    Both have contributed to get to this point. The seeds of this crisis were sown a long time ago.


  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 35,100 Mod ✭✭✭✭AlmightyCushion


    burkey2k0 wrote: »
    Agree with your point, but Just to nitpick. It's a good deal, but not that amazing a deal when you take into the cost of the mortgage over the years, even when you take into account capital appreciation.

    At a capital appreciation of let's say 2% (which is the average over the past number of decades) and a mortgage interest rate of 3% over those 25 years, the asset will appreciate to approx. €824,000, but the total mortgage cost would be approx. €640,000. Plus your initial €50,000 which is a total €690,000 cost of the asset.

    So a gain of €134,000 over 25 years in your example, not €500,000. so just under €5,500 a year.

    A return of approx. 11% annually on your investment.

    (I've left myself open now for people to nitpick at me, please be gentle! :) )

    You're forgetting the equity the landlord gained in the property over the years.

    You invested €150k at the beginning (my example had €50k but it doesn't really matter) and after 25 years you have a property worth €824k. You have made a gain of €674k. That is an insane return.

    If you are cashflow positive every month/year (as Fol20 argues a landlord should) your investment would be making an even better return. Even if you factor in this investment is cashflow negative to the tune of 10k a year. That means this has cost them 250k over the life of the mortgage.

    They are still up 424k. That is still a great investment.


  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 35,100 Mod ✭✭✭✭AlmightyCushion


    Also, to people saying if it was so lucrative then why isn't everyone doing it.

    1. Not everyone can due to the fact it required you to be able to leverage up.
    2. A lucrative long term investment, that is cashflow negative is difficult for people to support. Just because it is really, really worth it in the long run, doesn't mean people can or want to pay for it until the mortgage is paid off.

    You can argue that being cashflow negative makes being a landlord less desireable and I complete agree with that. You can't argue that if the rent isn't covering the mortgage, taxes and maintenance that it is not a profitable investment as you are paying off a large amount against the capital every year (obviously interest only don't count there).


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 137 ✭✭burkey2k0


    You're forgetting the equity the landlord gained in the property over the years.

    Yes! Sorry, that was a big miss. You are correct.

    And improves the return in Fol20s buy to let scenario (150k invested, 350k mortgage) to I think about a very approximate 10% Return per year at the end of 25yrs.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    You're forgetting the equity the landlord gained in the property over the years.

    You invested €150k at the beginning (my example had €50k but it doesn't really matter) and after 25 years you have a property worth €824k. You have made a gain of €674k. That is an insane return.

    ....

    Show me a house that needs 0 spent on it over 25yrs.
    Show me a house that's rented for 25yrs and needs no repair, no wear and tear.
    Show me a house that after 25yrs that hasn't dated.

    After all the above. This house bought in 1995 that has had no maintenance, and constantly rented, never repaired, refurbished, no taxes and charges. Bought for 150 after tax that gives you back in pocket 800k after cgt.

    Insane indeed.


  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 35,100 Mod ✭✭✭✭AlmightyCushion


    beauf wrote: »
    Show me a house that needs 0 spent on it over 25yrs.
    Show me a house that's rented for 25yrs and needs no repair, no wear and tear.
    Show me a house that after 25yrs that hasn't dated.

    After all the above. This house bought in 1995 that has had no maintenance, and constantly rented, never repaired, refurbished, no taxes and charges. Bought for 150 after tax that gives you back in pocket 800k after cgt.

    Insane indeed.

    You conveniently cut out the rest of my post where I say that even if this rental costs the landlord 10k a year, it would still be a profit of 424k.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,926 ✭✭✭Grumpypants


    You're forgetting the equity the landlord gained in the property over the years.

    You invested €150k at the beginning (my example had €50k but it doesn't really matter) and after 25 years you have a property worth €824k. You have made a gain of €674k. That is an insane return.

    If you are cashflow positive every month/year (as Fol20 argues a landlord should) your investment would be making an even better return. Even if you factor in this investment is cashflow negative to the tune of 10k a year. That means this has cost them 250k over the life of the mortgage.

    They are still up 424k. That is still a great investment.

    Your figures are all over the gaff.

    To buy a 500k house over 25 years you need.
    150k cash.
    350k mortgage.
    150k to cover the interest.
    So a 650k investment just to fund the purchase.

    A 500k house will require about 5k a year in upkeep, insurance, property tax. Etc so that's 125k.

    That's a 775k investment.

    To pay that off in 25 years you would need to get 31k or 2.5k a month of after tax rental income. To get 2.5k you need to charge about 6k rent.

    Even at the high end (which a 500k house isn't) 6k is a crazy amount.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,266 ✭✭✭meijin


    Your figures are all over the gaff.

    so all the LLs are doing it out of charity...?


  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 35,100 Mod ✭✭✭✭AlmightyCushion


    Your figures are all over the gaff.

    To buy a 500k house over 25 years you need.
    150k cash.
    350k mortgage.
    150k to cover the interest.
    So a 650k investment just to fund the purchase.

    A 500k house will require about 5k a year in upkeep, insurance, property tax. Etc so that's 125k.

    That's a 775k investment.

    To pay that off in 25 years you would need to get 31k or 2.5k a month of after tax rental income. To get 2.5k you need to charge about 6k rent.

    Even at the high end (which a 500k house isn't) 6k is a crazy amount.

    And your figures are deliberately misleading. Either that or you badly need an accountant if you are a landlord as you are owed a shít load of tax back from revenue.

    You don't pay tax on a lot of expenses including interest, yet you are saying they comes out of your after tax income.

    You're also forgetting that the house hasn't disappeared after the 25 year mortgage is up. You own the house. You need to factor that into your calculations.

    It's something a lot of landlords do here (a lot don't as well, thankfully) they deliberately use misleading figures to make the situation look worse than it is.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    meijin wrote: »
    so all the LLs are doing it out of charity...?

    Lets assume LLs are making vast profits.

    Why do the vast majority only own one house?
    Why is there a housing shortage.
    Why doesn't everyone become a LL if easy money.


  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 35,100 Mod ✭✭✭✭AlmightyCushion


    beauf wrote: »
    Lets assume LLs are making vast profits.

    Why do the vast majority only own one house?
    Why is there a housing shortage.
    Why doesn't everyone become a LL if easy money.

    It isn't easy money. However, in general, it can be a decent long term investment. For the record, I'm not saying that landlords are makings easy money hand over first. I'm just dispelling the myth that if the rent isn't covering the mortgage and expenses, that a landlord is losing money. That isn't the case.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    You conveniently cut out the rest of my post where I say that even if this rental costs the landlord 10k a year, it would still be a profit of 424k.

    Because your figures are nuts even with before you get into costs. You are saying that 150 after tax purchase of a house in 25 years puts 1.2million into your pocket before yearly costs.

    You've completely ignored that the market crashed. So it isn't 25yrs of capital appreciation. You bought in 1995, it peaked in 2007 then crashed something like 35-40%. So 12yrs of growth, then crashed, and took 12yrs to get back to almost that point. Thats less than half the growth you are claiming.

    And its only people who bought back in 95 or before that who have made that 12yrs of captial appreciation. Someone who bought 12yrs ago bought at much higher price, and it hasn't reached the same peak again. So no one else can repeat it.


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 35,100 Mod ✭✭✭✭AlmightyCushion


    beauf wrote: »
    Because your figures are nuts even with before you get into costs. You are saying that 150 after tax purchase of a house in 25 years puts 1.2million into your pocket before yearly costs.

    You've completely ignored that the market crashed. So it isn't 25yrs of capital appreciation. You bought in 1995, it peaked in 2007 then crashed something like 35-40%. So 12yrs of growth, then crashed, and took 12yrs to get back to almost that point. Thats less than half the growth you are claiming.

    And its only people who bought back in 95 or before that who have made that 12yrs of captial appreciation. Someone who bought 12yrs ago bought at much higher price, and it hasn't reached the same peak again. So no one else can repeat it.

    I think our wires are getting crossed a little here. This all started with my initial response to one of Fol20's posts.

    No I am absolutely not saying that. For a start, forget about capital appreciation. I didn't even factor that in originally, some one else added that in. You're actually highlighting the very point I was trying to make. My point was to highlight how lucrative an investment it would be if the rent was covering the mortgage and ask expenses. If that was the case a landlord would be making a fortune on their investment as you rightly point out.

    Fol20 was saying he shouldn't have to put any other money into his property as no other business expects to do the same. So he expects the rent to cover at least the mortgage (capital and interest) and all expenses associated with it e.g taxes, maintenance, up keep, fees, decorating, etc. That to me is madness and if it were happening would be an insanely good return on investment.


Advertisement