Buy to Let

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croyde

Original Poster:

23,001 posts

231 months

Tuesday 17th December 2013
quotequote all
So if I had £80k sitting in my normal bank account, one of those offset ones so it's currently saving me 1.5% divided by 12 a month off my interest only mortgage, would I be a lot better off getting a buy to let.

2 beds around here are £400k upwards so would anyone lend to me? Is it worked out on potential rent or my earnings after my current mortgage and expenses? A 2 bed new build apartment tends to go for £1700+ a month so what would my likely repayments be and profit after tax?

Are those ones when a management company, usually the same company that built the flats in the first place, deals with everything, worth pursuing?

Sorry for the questions but there has to be something sensible and reasonably safe to do with the cash apart from using it to fund maybe 4 years in an apartment of my own or get a flash car biggrin

croyde

Original Poster:

23,001 posts

231 months

Tuesday 17th December 2013
quotequote all
Thanks chaps. It's what I suspected. Seems crazy to have that sort of money lying around and apart from sticking it on Mummys Boy running in the 1330 at Kempton, there's not a lot to do biggrin

Been looking at Stratford, East London. 1 beds around £280k so £200k to finance, rent around the £1300/month mark. Figures still bad?

Property ISAs? Some money in now and some after April?

The money sitting in the bank is saving me £112 a month off my mortgage payments.

Edited by croyde on Tuesday 17th December 23:01

croyde

Original Poster:

23,001 posts

231 months

Tuesday 17th December 2013
quotequote all
simonej said:
£80k northern terraced house, purchased outright, let out for £420 per month? No interest to pay at with that method (ignoring the upkeep costs and letting a fees etc...)

Less chance of capital gains, I expect?
No but somewhere to retire to in 20 years or less smile

croyde

Original Poster:

23,001 posts

231 months

Tuesday 17th December 2013
quotequote all
Sarnie said:
At 80% LTV the rates aren't going to be favorable, especially as a First Time Landlord.
You'd be looking at circa 4.6%-5% and around £1,300 a month on Interest Only.

So £400 a month gross profit based on £1700 rental.......you would need to then work back the costs (tax, agents fees, property costs) to see if it's worth it over keeping the money in the bank....
So on those figures it's fingers crossed that the capital will increase over time.

I moved to SW London in '98 after having my fingers burned with a flat bought in '88 for £50k near Croydon and a long time selling to get £50k in '98. I survived the 15% mortgage and losing my job twice so was very cautious.

They were selling flats off plan, overlooking the Thames at Wandsworth Bridge for £150,000, these were 2 bedroomed. £5k deposit until built. Back then I thought prices just could not keep going up biggrin so I chickened out. My Fil took over the paperwork and sold the flat when built a year later, for £250,000. £100k profit, before tax, in a year.

They now go for £600k+.

Can prices go any higher biggrin

croyde

Original Poster:

23,001 posts

231 months

Wednesday 18th December 2013
quotequote all
Sarnie said:
Correct, although as per my other post, another 5% deposit makes all the difference and brings the payment down by c£500 a month......the issue is you being a First Time Landlord and only having a 20% deposit.
Thanks for answering. So if I can make a higher deposit, say 30%, it should put me in a better place with the lenders. Who does one tend to approach? I bank with First Direct, would they be any good?

croyde

Original Poster:

23,001 posts

231 months

Wednesday 18th December 2013
quotequote all
Cheers. What area are you suggesting. Ta.