Not necessarily. In general, you are better off cutting your overheads to the minimum, if and when you can. If there is tax relief available on an overhead, it is still worth cutting the overhead. In this case, the overhead is bank interest. Every €1 you spend on interest will only attract at most, 41c in tax relief. You will still be 59c worse off.The interest on an interest only loan of €255K at 5% is c. €13K p.a. If you are collecting €13K p.a. or more in rental income then surely it would make sense not to pay off any capital since you are able to write off 100% of interest against rental income?
Fair enough. Good point.Not necessarily. In general, you are better off cutting your overheads to the minimum, if and when you can. If there is tax relief available on an overhead, it is still worth cutting the overhead. In this case, the overhead is bank interest. Every €1 you spend on interest will only attract at most, 41c in tax relief. You will still be 59c worse off.
So your rental income losses are eating into your gross "paper" capital gains (if any) to date? Doesn't sound great...Sorry, I forgot to mention that the monthly rental income is slightly short of the monthly interest figure so we are topping it up a little together with any capital payments we might make.
Not necessarily. In general, you are better off cutting your overheads to the minimum, if and when you can. If there is tax relief available on an overhead, it is still worth cutting the overhead. In this case, the overhead is bank interest. Every €1 you spend on interest will only attract at most, 41c in tax relief. You will still be 59c worse off.
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