Thinking of buying your own home, think again?

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  • badapple
    V.I.P. Member
    • Dec 2008
    • 2041

    #1

    Thinking of buying your own home, think again?

    Think twice before taking the plunge.

    Buying a house is throwing your money down the drain.

    The statistics surrounding home ownership are worrying. A new report by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation has reported that just one in four couples will be able to afford to buy a home in the future. It warns that Britain is turning into a "rotten borough", where an entire generation will be locked out of buying their own homes.

    I am increasingly concerned that I might be in this group. In my late 20s, and with a reasonable salary, the huge deposit required and lack of first-time buyer mortgages available are just two of the barriers blocking any journey into home ownership.

    The next generation of homeowners

    According to the BBC, the average property price in the UK is a terrifying ?233,000 ? even with the current economic situation .

    In fact, the average property is eight times the average salary, and mortgage lending has fallen to its lowest level in nine years. Many first-time buyers are struggling to get onto the property ladder without financial assistance.

    This financial assistance, also known as "the bank of mum and dad", could also mean that home ownership will increasingly become a privilege for the children of the better off.

    With high property prices, the removal of the cap on university fees and a desperate employment market, it is hard to see how the next generation is ever going to conjure up a deposit.

    Actually, never mind the next generation, how am I ever going to conjure up a deposit?

    Your home is your castle ? Or is it?

    I'm sure that it is engrained in us at an early age that "an Englishman's home is his castle".

    We've all been led to believe that the very best thing we could possibly do with our hard-earned cash is put it into property. But however much I'd like my own front door, a dream kitchen and exact choices of Farrow and Ball paint, I am starting to wonder if homeownership might be somewhat overrated.

    After all, I often hear people talk of their "cursed mortgage", which keeps them in a job they hate, prevents them from holidaying at will, or leaves them wishing their lives away ? until, of course, that wonderful moment when the mortgage is paid off and they are finally free.

    The perils of ownership

    Common wisdom (which strikes me as far removed from common sense) is that you should take on the largest mortgage you possibly can.

    By doing this, you are able to fool yourselves and others that you are rich enough to live in the smart part of town. And, because your mortgage is just more than you can really afford to comfortably pay, the hardship you will have to endure to make those payments will prevent you from admitting how totally unglamorous it all is.

    Renters among you will be familiar with the phrase "throwing money down the drain", which is often applied to paying rent. But let us examine the moral high-ground of our homeowner friends.

    Let's say a homeowner has a ?200,000 mortgage. On a 25-year term at a 5% interest rate, this homeowner will pay more than ?150,000 in interest. So in many cases, the idea that this person owns the house is a myth. In fact, the bank owns it, and is selling it back to them at a ludicrous mark up.

    ?350,000 for a ?200,000 flat? I think wonga.com has better rates.

    If my boiler explodes ? I call my landlord, whereas a homeowner gets a colossal bill. When you own your own home, every time something breaks, you have to fix it ? or often more accurately, you have to pay to have it fixed.

    Renting a home also has a distinct advantage when it is time to move. Those who rent a property can leave at the end of their tenancy, and have the flexibility to move on relatively short notice.

    The only costs to pay when moving from a rented property are any agents' fees and the payment of a returnable deposit.

    On the other hand, selling your home takes a substantial amount of time and money. Estate agents take a cut, stamp duty eats into budgets, and solicitors, surveyors and mortgage companies all demand large fees.

    Of course, home ownership brings security and the possibility of profiting from your investment. That's one way of looking it, but the other side of the coin is that it can be an organised method of throwing money down a different drain.

    Not even a good investment

    When people put money away for their future they apply a completely different set of rules to those buying a home. But both sets consider it an investment.

    The latest report from the Council of Mortgage Lenders shows that the average deposit for a first-time buyer is now ?26,000 ?almost a year's salary.

    And it's money you won't see again, or at least won't see for 25-odd years, as each time you move you take it with you.

    On top of that, it's all wrapped up in a single property ? while every investment expert says you should spread your risks ? that could suffer all sorts of problems, you can't get at it in a hurry if you need it, and you need to get into a huge amount of debt to buy into this investment. Debt that must be paid for.

    At least with a pension (money that you also won't see for years) you get a tax break and your employer often helps out (and will soon be forced to), with a property you are taxed when you buy and taxed when you move. Considering property is currently in the middle of its worst slump ever, according to the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, there's even doubt that you will make any money at all after all your expenses.

    The bottom line

    I won't deny that I'd very much like my own front door, but for now at least, I'll enjoy leasing the one I've got, and try and keep the usurers away from it for another month.

    ***
    Do what the scroungers do, get yourself a Council/private rented place & claim every benefit you can think of & save your money under your kingsize matress because you will be in a LOOSE, LOOSE situation!
    SLOWLY, OUR FREEDOM IS BEING ERASED.
    SOON, WE WILL JUST BE A NUMBER.
    IF WE DON'T FOLLOW, WE WILL BE ERASED.
  • cgscott
    V.I.P. Member
    • Jul 2008
    • 3513

    #2
    OK i have a house. I pay mortgage till im 45 then its paid. I own the house outright.
    The house price increases (hopefully) in the future.
    I can then decide to do what i then pay council tax and gas electric and nothing more.

    Cant see why anyone would think that buying a house was not a good idea?

    I could then rent it to someone who's 20 year old for 40 years that thinks buying a house is a bad idea then fly back home from my villa in spain that he pays for to fix something for him.

    That mans got his head in the sand!
    sigpic


    Patience is a virtue.

    Comment

    • oneman
      DK Veteran
      • Mar 2011
      • 307

      #3
      I would not consider a house purchase an investment, its somewhere to live and make home. Plus you have to look long term, no in a year or 5 years time.

      Of course there are plenty of benefits to renting as there are to buying.

      As for benefits, that's an attitude that some people have, its up to them how they want to live their lives.

      Comment

      • Evastar
        V.I.P. Member
        • Apr 2009
        • 1220

        #4
        i look on my home as an inheritance for my kids, that they will either have somewhere to live that's their own if i die anytime soon, or they can sell it and use it to finance something else in their lives if i'm older and they are already settled.

        Comment

        • patkins
          V.I.P. Member
          • Oct 2009
          • 3662

          #5
          You take a gamble when taking out a mortgage. Will you ever see it paid? If you lose your job you may lose your house.
          The banks here have changed their tune dramatically. You now only get a percentage of the house price and you must put up the rest (just like it was before we all lost the run of ourselves with 100% loans) You now have to account for (with receipts) your part of the money and even if your end of the money is given to you by parents then they have to account for where they got or raised the money all under the guise that this is to prevent money laundering.

          Comment

          • cgscott
            V.I.P. Member
            • Jul 2008
            • 3513

            #6
            I will see mines paid. Fact. Its a proper investment.

            I feel for people who cant get a mortgage now because of the banks ~~~~ ups. I was lucky i got in when i did or i would be in same situation. But to say renting is an option i dont think so. I could get ?600 a month for mines rented and my mortgage is less so there's only one way in my eyes.

            The banks have ~~~~ed it for everyone who never got the chance or dont have the deposits so now renting looks like a good option because thats ll they got left.

            And as for get a council house my mates (hes single) been on waiting list 10 years and never been offered on yet young lass he used to babysit just spat a bairn out at 16 year old and has a cushty flat. She did get offered 3 different ones so she could decide which was best for her kid.

            Societys ~~~~ed, the countrys ~~~~ed. Enough said!
            sigpic


            Patience is a virtue.

            Comment

            • Snowy79
              DK Veteran
              • Jan 2011
              • 1347

              #7
              The way I see it I'll be selling my house when I'm 55 if I live that long and travelling the World. Living off a decent pension whilst I do it. Once the money runs out it's back to good old Blighty to plead poverty and as a pensioner get a nice Tax Payer funded flat. A few years of this to get some of my previously paid taxes back, then just before they wheel me off to an old peoples home where I'm fed bread and water then drugged up so no one knows I'll just go out and shoot a few druggies. Get banged up in a cell with Sky TV, 3 hot meals a day and priority for medical treatment. Sorted.

              Comment

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