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I agree on your general point - there are very few circumstances in which "flipping" stands to make any money, unless you're able to hive off a site from the garden or something like that, and you can spend more than the same house in good condition will cost.One interesting thing I've seen with properties in the city centre is that often the price for the property (in very poor condition) is €250k, while the max. price for the property brought up to a reasonable condition is €375k, but the work required to get it to this standard would be minimum €150k - even for a builder. Basically the estate agent has no idea about the costs of renovation, and is hoping that whoever is buying is equally ignorant.
I'm thinking of specific examples of houses in the city centre area - Shandon, Blarney St. etc. which are specifically sold as "investment properties".I don't think it's purely ignorance about renovation costs that gives rise to the lower price differential you refer to, though.
If they're in multiple units, perhaps that's what makes the difference - that they're longer term investment? Or maybe you're right and that sector of the market is quite reliant on the invidious combination of naivete and greed. [In the property market in Ireland?...I'm thinking of specific examples of houses in the city centre area - Shandon, Blarney St. etc. which are specifically sold as "investment properties".
If they're in multiple units, perhaps that's what makes the difference - that they're longer term investment?
I think we may have met some of the same estate agents...a "sure you'd definitely get a small one bedroom apartment in there" type attitude...
Flipping a la Sara Beeney doesn't work at this stage in the Irish market as a rule, for lots of reasons. Exceptions, as someone pointed out, are houses on large sites where another house can be built, with or without demolishing the existing one.
The major problem in Ireland seems to be the unrealistic prices that the market will pay for houses needing renovation versus 100% ok houses in the same area. The price differential is simply not high enough, and labour and materials are too expensive here.
In the UK, the market is more sensible about the value of a fixer-upper, and buyers generally won't go beyond the market value that allows for profit after having done the necessary work. I would always advise people who want to repair/flip to go to the Uk and do it there, better chance of getting a margin. Labour costs are far more realistic and materials are that bit cheaper.
The other side of this coin of course is that when market conditions arise where the houses needing repair are priced keenly, it probably means that the market is cooling and the price post-renovation will have dropped. Hard to win in this area in Ireland unless you can add value in some other way, such as commercial use or adding another house to the site.
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