But if you can put 60k down on a 100 - 110k house then repayments shouldn't be an issue it's onlly 40 - 50k you need to borrow.
2 years is a long time, then we have the unknown of what house prices are actually going to do.
But if you can put 60k down on a 100 - 110k house then repayments shouldn't be an issue it's onlly 40 - 50k you need to borrow.
This country has such a poor rental market and an obsession with owning your own house.
why would you not want to own your own house though? how are you going to afford to rent after 65 if you've raised a family or not been careful with your money, are they going to let you live there 'rent free'? no, they're not.
like people who don't bother paying into a pension and think they can live off the money they make on the house they will sell when they hit old age, it is a flawed idea as unfortuanetly the chances of survival in the wild are slim.
Worked for me.
Because the deposit is one thing, affording the repayments is another.
Continue to go down.
Instead of paying down the principal the money goes into savings account or other assets?
It's hardly dead money, just a lame excuse not to move out and spend the money on beer/gadgets/whatever other vices you have instead.
how much are your savings earning you?
How much is your house earning you? Really depends in what area, in some you get negative rates atm.
It's pretty sure fire that as the population increases the land and therefore house prices will appreciate.
If you don't own your own home by the time you retire, what is the common path at that point? I was wondering this the other day. I guess you have to save enough to cover rent until you die?
go down on how big a scale though? say the op is looking at a house circa £130k, it may, may drop 10% that's still not a great deal to warrant renting and waiting and good houses don't hang about, if he ends up in a bidding war, it will go for over the asking price. the key is to find the right house, that's the only reason to wait, not an ok'ish house that is going cheap.
The attitude that rent is "dead money" is quite strange. Do you consider that paying for food is dead money? How about paying for electricity or water or gas? After all, you don't end up with assets paying for those, yet you need those to live, exactly the same as paying rent.
But as the prices increase, no one will have the money to buy them and demand will go down?
You will not be able to get a mortgage the repayments of which you can't afford. You could probably afford repayments of upto £400 on your current salary, especially if you have kept some of your savings for an emergencies/big spends fund. Is there any reason why you see your salary being stuck at the amount it currently is? What do you do for a living?Because the deposit is one thing, affording the repayments is another.