I suppose the proopsed profit doesn't matter at all?
In order to survive a recession it is usually best to minimise debts as much as possible. Anyone who decides to take on such huge debts in an era that we have not seen since the Great Depression of the 1930's is either very brave or very foolish or perhaps a mixture of the two
Rents in most of ireland are reasonable if one looks as rental cost in relation to average income - house prices are not. Expect rents to stay static, or even begin to increase as economic panic people such as yourself believe ...
He's renting 9 rooms, with one person to every room.I agree. renting 9 rooms to 12 people is going to be an unbvelievable headache - particularly when they are students.
Chicken lickin' economics will not get you very far.
I think you are missing the bit that he is buying a 9 br house in cork city centre beside the university for 300k from his uncle.
Your numbers assume 52 weeks per year occupancy for each and every room. This isn't unlikely, it's impossible, especially when renting to students.
40 week occupancy equates to a rental return of 37800, still a healthy return on investment but you've also to account for the fact that you'll be renting out 9 rooms. Over the course of a year that equates to a lot of work.
Wrong.Correct me if i'm wrong , but i understood that students had to pay rent in advance for 12 months occupancy , regardless of the college term ?
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