Introuble83
Registered User
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Not sure you would get a property in Dublin for € 250,000 with a net rent of € 21,000 per annum after costs and expenses ie net yield of 8.4%
Most of the costs are upfront . A letting agency can deal with the tenancy on a monthly fee basis . If he even obtained 1k a month of rent over 5 years it’s 60k. If he sold the property on the 5th year even for what he paid he would net at least 30k profit after all costs incurred . Unless I am missing something? Too optimistic perhapsThere's alot of costs involved with purchasing property, legal fees, surveys, stamp duty, furniture etc then the stress of having to manage tennents as well as the bureaucracy of having to register and deal with the RTB.
I would be more inclined to withdraw a set sum from the savings for next five years and put the rest in a savings account.
I don’t think 250k over 7 years is a spartan existence when you have no borrowings or dependents . What exactly could you spend 700 a week on in these times when you can barely get out of the countryWhat will your father live on if his tenant loses his job and stops paying his rent?
It happens.
If he really wants to retire now he would be better off living on his cash savings until the State pension kicks in.
Mind you, it will be a fairly Spartan existence.
I don’t think 250k over 7 years is a spartan existence when you have no borrowings or dependents . What exactly could you spend 700 a week on in these times when you can barely get out of the country
This is a good point which he had not consWhat will your father live on if his tenant loses his job and stops paying his rent?
It happens.
If he really wants to retire now he would be better off living on his cash savings until the State pension kicks in.
Mind you, it will be a fairly Spartan existence.
1-2 years to get rid of a tennant? I would just forcefully remove them and deal with the legalities of such actions separately .I think main risk would be if tenant didn't pay. It will be 1-2 years plus money and time to remove them if they stop paying.
He'd need a buffer to cover 1-2 years expenses imo.
1-2 years to get rid of a tennant? I would just forcefully remove them and deal with the legalities of such actions separately .
I don’t think 250k over 7 years is a spartan existence when you have no borrowings or dependents . What exactly could you spend 700 a week on in these times when you can barely get out of the country
whats the likelihood of getting a tenant that doesn't pay and for that length of time? In my experience its very low. I have never had a tenant that did not pay their rent but maybe I am lucky in that regard. I've always vetted tenants and have had good'ns.
That seems very measured advise thanksI’m pretty sure that Sarenco meant that the parent would draw €13k a year from his cash reserves until his €13k State Pension kicks in.
When is that for a 61 year old, still 66, correct?
So let’s assume 4.5 years x €13k, i.e. €60k.
If he’s hell bent on buying a property, I’d consider holding back, say, 1.5 year’s income to mitigate the risk of a dodgy tenant or fallow period. And then buy somewhere for €230k.
Or instead of buying one property, I’d buy, say, €220k worth of IRES, the Irish residential REIT (i.e. listed property share). It pays a nice dividend, and is more diversified in that you own thousands of properties instead of one. The cash could supplement the dividend income until the State Pension kicks in.
I personally wouldn't retire early to live on €20k a year if I had any choice in the matter.€13k a year mightn’t be great, but circa €20k give or take would be a lot better. If someone has worked hard all of their life, they deserve a non-Spartan retirement.
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