You've posted an interesting read and it's obvious you put the graft in. However you don't seem to consider things like work/life balance? (obviously this varies for everyone!)
Hah! Work life balance is is something you wont have the luxury of to start off with, unless you are very lucky, and generally most people are not.
I don't want to burst anyone's bubble, but successful people don't just do mon-fri 9-5 all of their lives. They do the graft and the silly hours and put in the spade work to achieve something. Either build up their own business or progress their career as an employee. Sure the likes of Branston and Sugar look like they have an easy life but they grafted the same as anyone at the start. They took the risks, they gambled on losing everything if a decision was the wrong one. I don't look at people like that and think they are simply lucky. FoxEye made a comment about my view being as someone who has a nice house/job etc already (IE it is easy for me to preach and I don't understand the pressures of young people today

). Do you think young people today are unique somehow? Do you think that the previous generation(s) did not also have to tackle problems and work their backsides off to get anywhere in life? Young people today face no worse problems than I faced, or those before me faced. I didn't just leave home and buy a detached house on a nice estate straight off the bat. I rented. I house shared with my brother. I even moved out of my home town.
When it came to buying we had to move out of the area we lived in because we couldn't afford the prices. Ho hum, tough luck for us. If we had the attitude of "why should I move out of the area" we would never have bought a house.
The bottom line is, if you want something - I mean really want it, you can do it. I suspect that many people see someone like me and think I have no idea. I don't have a clue. I have my house I have my comfortable life and I just don't get it.
Wrong. I get it perfectly well, that is
why I have a nice home and a comfortable life. It is ironic that the kind of people that will accuse me as having no clue are actually the ones without a clue
Also your talk about holidays, what does 500 quid or so matter when you consider the interest alone on say a 150k is many times greater in magnitude. Personally I think this just seems a non justified attack on non home owners (they're allowed to have fun before getting on the ladder too you know!)
Please do not misconstrue my meaning. I have no problems with younger folk having fun and going on the holidays and having the cars. But then please do not turn around and complain you don't have a deposit for a house or that you can't afford rent. You pay your money, you make your choices.
That is a tough lesson in life that young people these days seem to fail at learning. Truthfully, unless you are very fortunate you will not be able to have your cake and eat it. If you are under the illusion you can, or that people like me had our cake and eat it you are sadly misled.
I went without a lot to be able to have the life I have now. I made my choices and now I reap the reward. When I was working in a factory on shifts and I often felt like giving up. I used to think why should I work so hard and have nothing to show for it, what is the point.
Well my position in life now is the point. Young people today have to try and look at the bigger picture, the long term and grasp the nettle and get their heads down and graft.
For what it's worth as a young person I feel the cost of rent is damn high. I'm going to be a high earner (already over the average of 24k I think thanks to years of education/uni) tho so it's not particularly going to cripple me financially like others where it seems impossible to get on it down south. Tbh even for me I have large doubts about wether I'd ever buy property down south however I will be saving as soon as I move to Cambridge after uni.
As I said, when I left home I rented a one bed flat for £480 + electricity + council tax + food etc etc. I had barely anything left out of my wages. But I wasn't at home, I was making my own way in life as an independent adult. This was lesson 1 in growing up. There have been many, many more.
Also - I don't have an issue with people who don't own their homes. I wouldn't if it wasn't for my wife insisting. Renting gave us far more disposable income and allowed for more freedom of movement if we wanted to move around.
We went from paying £600 a month rent, + the usual council tax and bills to paying out £1,000 a month on the mortgage + life insurances + bills etc. Our total outgoings to run the house we now live in are
double what it cost to rent the same kind of place. I just think of all the holidays we could be going on and all the fun we could be having!! But no, we bit the bullet and bought a house as an investment (Again the big picture. The long term outlook).
We recently remortgaged and could have seen a nice drop in monthly payments and the temptation was high. Instead we decided to pay the same on a mortgage with a lower interest rate than we had before. In so doing we knocked 4 years straight off our mortgage term. In another 18 months we will remortgage again on a fixed rate. If the interest rates are still low, our LTV will have dipped below the 60% mark and we will be able to knock another big chunk off the term. The reason is because we bought fairly late, and didn't want a full term mortgage hanging over us. If my long term plans come to fruition we will own this house outright after just 16 years from the date we moved in. But anything can happen between now and then.
So we are paying through the nose to try and reduce the term ASAP. So in 2028 when we are mortgage free and the people we know who decided to pay less instead of reducing the term still have years to pay and we are enjoying our middle years mortgage free, the effort will be worth it.
Of course my plans could all fail and we lose the house for one reason or another. But that is no reason not to have a plan, or to work at bringing it to fruition. If bad things happen we will cross that bridge when we come to it.
Expect the best, prepare for the worst
Lord-Jaffa said:
What? Why Would I have to move when I already have a decent job, Also I live outside the M25, there is no way on earth I would move closer to London. I have all the Job prospects I could want should I ever want to work in the city, which I most defiantly do not. I have kids settled in local school/nursery as well.
Did you not read my post? I have a family, why the hell would I want to move across the country and move them away from cousins, aunts, uncles, grandparents? I take it you are single then? The "why don't you just move" brigade must not have any responsibility at all, I'm sure it is easy to just up and move if you are a complete loner and don't mind leaving what little family you must have behind.
If you want to buy a house but cannot afford the area you live in, you have to buy in an area that you can afford. It is a simple equation. Dont blame the govenment because you happen to live somewhere that is out of your price range.
I had to move away from my home town, away from all of my family.
We also had to move away from the lovely area where we were renting when it did become time to buy because we couldn't afford to buy in that area.
I barely see my family now. It sucks, and I really miss them, but it is the only way I could afford to buy.
That's just life, and sometimes it sucks! But if you want something bad enough - you will put up with it.