QUOTE(coconutxyz @ May 30 2023, 01:18 PM)
That's reassuring that not everyone can cover their instalment with rental, unless good property or those with really good judgement and experience.
I did some evaluation and for a 3.5k instalment, assuming if I can rent it out for around 1.5k for 1k sqf , 2k per month is still manageable since it is below 1/3 of my nett salary. But that is if someone is renting and the worse would be paying for 3.5k per month
I've asked my friends who lives around the area and the demographic seems like meant for families but the htc is concerning..and also the disposable income of the targeted tenant
To further add on the the 50-80% of monthly instalment covered by rental: This only applies if the monthly instalment does not exceed 1.8k - 2.5k, and even then it's still far from ideal.I did some evaluation and for a 3.5k instalment, assuming if I can rent it out for around 1.5k for 1k sqf , 2k per month is still manageable since it is below 1/3 of my nett salary. But that is if someone is renting and the worse would be paying for 3.5k per month
I've asked my friends who lives around the area and the demographic seems like meant for families but the htc is concerning..and also the disposable income of the targeted tenant
The idea is that you can collect rental to cover interest rate and then later a decade later you flip the property (sell it off) and get a decent chunk of profit from the subsale.
This is somewhat risky and only works if you're not financially burdened elsewhere+have healthy savings and investment to fall back on in the event you're forced to sell at far below market value/sell early/get no tenants for too long.
For something like Livista which is a high end, high price property, the subsale for that kind of price moves too slow + your comment about your salary means the monthly instalment is priced far above your affordability to make it a sensible investment.
May 30 2023, 02:07 PM

Quote
0.0141sec
0.65
5 queries
GZIP Disabled