selling BTL

galway_blow_in

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hi everyone , have not posted in a good few months

anyway , i own a two bed apartment since october 2015 , i bought it with tenants in situ , the tenants were no trouble at all but decided to leave in january as they have bought a home

anyway , i decided to put the property on the market , the current bid is 25% above what i paid less than eighteen months ago , now the property had a rent review last september and the rent was increased to 850 per month , im selling because i think legislation has become too defensive of delinquent tenants and i could not predict when i might find myself with a tenant who was unwilling to pay on time if at all , add to that the property is a ninety minute drive away , i think i can do better by putting the money into the equity markets , sterling is very attractive right now and im eying up a long established investment trust which has favourable taxation laws in comparison to ETF,s when it comes to CGT

who thinks im mad ?
 
Galway were all mad.
I think you know the answer to the question you are asking. For whatever reason since 2015 you attitude to been a landlord has changed. No matter what type or how diversified your investments are been a landlord is not for everyone. Take your profit spend a few bob going mad and invest in assets of your choice. Best of luck.
 
no debt on property , just to add , an uncle is returning to ireland from canada this summer , he has lived there for forty years , he is talking about selling a thirty acre farm he bought in 1974 , i would only be willing to pay 100 k for it but would then hope to plant it in forestry , i think forestry with its tax free status is actually an attractive investment right now

even it was not possible to buy this land , i would still offload the apartment !
 
Galway were all mad.
I think you know the answer to the question you are asking. For whatever reason since 2015 you attitude to been a landlord has changed. No matter what type or how diversified your investments are been a landlord is not for everyone. Take your profit spend a few bob going mad and invest in assets of your choice. Best of luck.

my attitude is entirely down to how the states attitude to landlords has developed , i dont mind dealing with broken washing machines etc
 
the one great thing about property is that people tend to hang onto it as its not easy to buy and sell, therefore they actually do capture the natural capital gains. With investments like shares etc its too easy to cash out when things get turbulent like a year ago rather than holding onto them for years on end. I know everyone says they are a buy and hold investor until the next shakeout. I got caught a bit myself last year when I sold a few losers for tax loss purposes and then could not bring myself to reinvest after the tax loss month was over so missed out on some of the recovery.
Is the farm in Ireland or Canada, 100k very cheap for an irish farm of 30 acres, if in canada there is restrictions on non canadians investing in farmland, I think you have to be a bona fida farmer and actually farm it
 
the one great thing about property is that people tend to hang onto it as its not easy to buy and sell, therefore they actually do capture the natural capital gains. With investments like shares etc its too easy to cash out when things get turbulent like a year ago rather than holding onto them for years on end. I know everyone says they are a buy and hold investor until the next shakeout. I got caught a bit myself last year when I sold a few losers for tax loss purposes and then could not bring myself to reinvest after the tax loss month was over so missed out on some of the recovery.
Is the farm in Ireland or Canada, 100k very cheap for an irish farm of 30 acres, if in canada there is restrictions on non canadians investing in farmland, I think you have to be a bona fida farmer and actually farm it

the farm is in ireland , you dont have to be a bone fide farm to draw forestry premium , changes were made in the last five years or so

you would be surprised what has happened the farm land market this past number of years , its fallen very hard and with brexit , is only going to fall further , land is actually cheaper today than it was in 2012 when housing bottomed ( at least in dublin ) so its entirely decoupled from the broader property market , the only farming sector where there is any profit is dairying , 90% of beef farmers would go out of business in the morning were subsidies removed and subsidies come from the EU , the EU is looking shaky going forward and one of its biggest donors is leaving , subsidies are the only thing which allow unviable beef farmers avoid having to sell their farms
 
I'll pass, thanks. I have neither the time nor the inclination to help someone with that kind of attitude.

" attitude "

?

its a common american term ( do the math ) , lived there for a few years back in the day

anyway

cost of property was 120 k + stamp duty + legal fees , total = 123 k

rent per month = 850 x 12 = 10200

10200 minus management fee of 1100 = 9100

insurance and property tax = 250 or thereabouts = 8850

repairs , potential replacement of furniture or electrical items = perhaps 500 per year ( it was more in 2016 )

so deduct 500 from 8850 = 8350

in the event of a situation where property was empty for even a few weeks over a few years , im rounding income off to 8000

yield = 123 k over 8000 = slightly above 6.5%

now were i to agree to sell the place for the current bid of 150 k , the new owner ( with rents frozen for two years ) would realise a low yield than that
 
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the farm is in ireland , you dont have to be a bone fide farm to draw forestry premium , changes were made in the last five years or so

you would be surprised what has happened the farm land market this past number of years , its fallen very hard and with brexit , is only going to fall further , land is actually cheaper today than it was in 2012 when housing bottomed ( at least in dublin ) so its entirely decoupled from the broader property market , the only farming sector where there is any profit is dairying , 90% of beef farmers would go out of business in the morning were subsidies removed and subsidies come from the EU , the EU is looking shaky going forward and one of its biggest donors is leaving , subsidies are the only thing which allow unviable beef farmers avoid having to sell their farms
actually I agree but I thought the big shakeout happened after the 2008 recession when the property bubble collapsed, I thought farmland prices were circa 8000 euros an acre . Also once the forestry premiums have been claimed the forestry land has a much lower market value than new land going into forestry because of premiums. Also forestry premiums come from EU aswell, you would imagine that a maturing forest would be higher value than new land with no plantings or investment gone in
 
You need to do the math yourself.

The relevant yield is the return on the value of your investment. Not the return on what you paid for it.



Brendan


Thanks Brendan

I never actually viewed it that way , I've a current bid of 150 k, solicitor and estate agent fees will likely come to around 4 k including vat , 146 k over 8 k rent per annum = 5.5 %
 
actually I agree but I thought the big shakeout happened after the 2008 recession when the property bubble collapsed, I thought farmland prices were circa 8000 euros an acre . Also once the forestry premiums have been claimed the forestry land has a much lower market value than new land going into forestry because of premiums. Also forestry premiums come from EU aswell, you would imagine that a maturing forest would be higher value than new land with no plantings or investment gone in

Farm Land fell like everything else in the crash but then decoupled from the rest of the market, it's cheaper today than it was in 2011

most land is not used for dairying or growing potatoes or grain , a good beef farmer might be able to make 200 euro profit per acre in a year of good beef prices , if land is 8 k an acre , thats a return of 2.5%

the average beef farmer looses money each year and eats into their cheque in the post from europe , its a situation which is unsustainable even politically long term , if subsidies reduce going forward , land prices have to drop , this is a good thing in any event as it will allow viable farmers to afford land and expand , scale is absurdly small in this country when it comes to farming
 
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Just on the foresty ,all people with land get the same rate of grant and premium,no more preferential advantage if a farmer/landowner. Also the Irish exchequer funds the forestry not the eu
 
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So. 150K - 123 - 4 = Profit 23K. Personal exemption around 2K I think. So 21K @ 30% (can't remember the CGT rate) 6.3K to the government. Leaves you with 15K.

Personally I find it odd you only went into the business in 2015 and are already jumping back out. At least you can. With an extra 15K.
 
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