interested21
Registered User
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- 85
Our PPR suits us great now, but it will not work for a growing family.
From experience, wait til you have kids to pick your "forever" home.I'd suggest trading up to lifetime home now.
wait til you have kids to pick your "forever" home.
Yeah we're definitely pretty conscious of this, both in terms of starting a family but also that the premium that's paid for our skills at the moment may not last forever as well. As a result we don't want to get too comfortable with our current earnings.My wife and i would have been in a similar position at your age and you assume that you will both continue in your careers but for a lot of dual income families the reality is that you cant, or at least not to the same extent that you did before.
You're totally right that our current house in its current state could suit us another 5 years, however we're also conscious that it will be a lot easier to move or get work done while there is just the two of us. It would all be a lot more stressful with a family. It's a bit of chicken and egg - we want to sort ourselves before we have a family, but we probably don't fully understand everything we need until we have a family as @NoRegretsCoyote says.Wait until you have a family. It will presumably still suit you both for a couple of years after a child is born.
For some reason I hadn't even looked in to financing the extension through a loan as I assumed it would be a separate (expensive) loan rather than a mortgage top-up. That definitely makes it a lot easier. Thanks Brendan.You will have no problem raising a new mortgage to pay for the extension.
Moving was our initial preference, but we found that any house we would like to move to also would require work to be done, so not sure if there's any avoiding rennovations.Given your level of incomes at your age, you will inevitably want to move to a bigger and better area. So when you need a bigger house trade up.
Yeah this is something we're quite aware of. It'll be 12 months before we're ready to do anything anyway so I'd imagine costs will have settled down a bit by then.If you do decide to extend your house, this is not a good time to do it. Labour and materials are in short supply and expensive. We may well have a recession in a few years and builders will actually want your business.
Yeah this is something we're quite aware of. It'll be 12 months before we're ready to do anything anyway so I'd imagine costs will have settled down a bit by then.
Can I ask how you're managing your finances and budget around the uncertainty of the costs ahead?Speaking to a QS the expectation is the pace of increases in materials will slowdown but it won't necessarily mean price reductions. In this environment you just need your money to work harder for you when getting the work down, for example shopping around for clearance tiles, or putting down a laminate vs real wood. In terms of the construction get a good engineer to help minimise expensive unnecessary work e.g. maybe leaving a window in place gives the same effect as knocking out a new window.
We are planning renovations and I found it incredibly difficult to get an accurate view of how much works will cost. You will likely need to pay an architect / QS / Engineer to get that view. However, from what I have found you are unlikely to get a rear 2 storey extension for less than 100k
Can I ask how you're managing your finances and budget around the uncertainty of the costs ahead?
Dublinbay12, that was the way it worked a year or two ago, but at the moment most (possibly) all builders will not agree to a fixed price contract due to material price escalations. It may be worth looking at a cost plus type of contract with fixed prelims - but just bear in mind you will still be carrying the material price escalation risk.a builder will come back with a cost and we will agree and sign the contract
Dublinbay12, that was the way it worked a year or two ago, but at the moment most (possibly) all builders will not agree to a fixed price contract due to material price escalations. It may be worth looking at a cost plus type of contract with fixed prelims - but just bear in mind you will still be carrying the material price escalation risk.
Best of luck with the project.
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