Why Should You Buy a Property?

Posted by: real estate / Category: Buying

House prices are sky-scraping but still you can enter the buying market. There are five good reasons you should think of buying a house.

Do you think property is an asset? It’s simply not true. You buy a house so that you have a roof over your head. Whether the price of the property is going up or down should not affect you. As long as you like the house, you can make repayments and like the area nothing else really matters. The only way of making real money is you decide to sell the house at some stage and keep the profits or downsize and do the same. A growing proportion of people do downsize. According to a research, one in three house sales involve people selling up to move to a smaller property. Nearly 54 % of the people are selling their property because they are not able to pay mortgage amount and not because they want equity from their property as cash in hand. A further 15 % sell the property because they have split up from their partners. Some 20% are retirees over 60. They also plan to sell their property to clear all their debts. Only 12 % buy a smaller property and also have cash in hand which they often recycle it, giving their children a leg up the property ladder instead. Property is not a cash-generative machine. Even if people think it is, it will take nearly 20 years.

A house should be treated as a shelter and not as an investment , no one wants to buy a property whose worth is far less than they paid for it only a couple of years before. While buying a house you put most of the money that you have saved in your lifetime. Facts tell that property does not perform as well as shares over the long term but it does retain its value over the years. But still people purchase a home for their old age or to lead a hassle free life. The average UK property cost was ?0,000 in 1983 but now the value has increased to ?60,000. Your focus on buying a property should not be for a short period but look ahead at least 25 to 30 years-roughly the amount of time it takes to pay your mortgage amount.

Between 1989 and 1995 millions of people where found paying off mortgages that were greater than the value of the homes they were living in. Many people had their homes repossessed, as they were not able to pay the mortgage amount. Some borrowers would walk into lenders offices and hand over the front door keys and walk out again. It was not negative equity that led to repossessions but due to economic conditions like rise in unemployment rate, high inflation and interest rates went up to 15%. People who were able to pay home loans, negative equity never affected their life. Lenders launched mortgage products on the market that allowed borrowers keen to move to do so. A significant effect of negative equity was that prices were falling fast. The reason could be because people bought starter homes that no-one wanted, or because they lived in parts of the country that were badly affected by worsening economic conditions.

When property prices are rising people buy the property thinking that if they don’t buy now, they have to pay even more in the future. There is residential property shortage in UK, which will be resolved by next decade. Each year the number of homes built is about 20,000 less than what is needed. By 2021 there will be 2.1 million more married people in England, counterbalanced by5 million more single adults and a further 1.5 million divorced. Most of the net increases in household numbers come from one person households. The key driver for household information is the relationship between income and affordability-what a person earns, relative to prices in the market. If the multiples of income to property prices rise from 3.5 to nearer 5 times earnings, many people will not be forming households: they will live at home or in rented accommodation.

If you plan to live in a rented accommodation, you will not be able to take a decision about how the place should look like. You will yearn for something that is uniquely yours, where you can express your own personality. If you buy your own property, you will never have to put up with someone else’s good taste again.

Ron Victor is a Expert author for UK auction list and property auction. He has written many articles like UK property auctions, property auctioneers, property in UK and Property auctions. For more information visit: http://www.propertyauctionzone.com contact me at ron.seocopywriter@gmail.com

Ron_Victor

Things to know:

1. Check your financial status: can you afford a new home at a recession period? Do you have an emergency fund you can count on for at least six months? Are you sure you have a steady job as well as a stable job? Do you have enough money for the down payment?

2. Get a credible and well informed estate broker that could give you information about the best mortgage lenders. Do a proper research on few of them and establish a relation with at least two of them. This might involve opening account with the two. This… Continue reading

Since 2007 the housing market has been in turmoil.

Lenders stopped lending, house builders stopped building and home owners have slid in to negative equity.

Month after month house prices have slipped making the average price of a property in the region of 20% less than it was at peak. Only in recent months have the declines in the monthly falls really been noticed.

Many home owners are now stuck in negative equity unable to move. During the boom years when their house was worth a lot more they may have used the equity available from their home as unearned income. With this… Continue reading

With these first time home buyer grants from the government, new home owners can get down payment assistance to help them purchase their brand new home. This is funding that is provided to tax paying citizen, generally through local government agencies, and can be obtained regardless of income or credit.

First time home buyer grants can provide as much as $20,000 in cash to be used towards your down payment or closing costs. That’s instant equity that you can put into your home and more money that you can keep in your pocket.

Buying a home is one of the biggest purchases… Continue reading

OWN: Your home builds equity for your future. You can use equity to move up to a new larger home one day, or to help send your children to college.RENT: No equity is built, no matter how long you rent. It’s like pouring money down the drain.

OWN: You control your monthly payment.RENT: Landlord controls payment.

OWN: New home buying tip: mortgage interest is tax-deductible. The government’s loss is your gain.RENT: No tax benefits.

OWN: A nice, safe backyard for children to play. You have room for pets, and also a garden.RENT: No backyard, no garden. Often pets not allowed.

OWN: A new garage… Continue reading

Tags: , ,

Related posts

Tags: , ,

Leave a Reply