Crosswords0 min ago
selling house
8 Answers
we have a 100% mortgage on a property in London that we will outgrow in 1 year. should we hold on for a year and sell or sell now in anticipation of a price drop?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by henry12. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
Like everybody else, you would be acting (or not) based purely upon speculation. I would say that London is, generally speaking, immune from significant drops, due to constant demand for properties to rent and buy.
If you have no equity in the property, would renting it cover your mortgage? On that basis, you could live where you choose and the rental property would, based upon historical price trends, eventually glean an equity profit for you both
Just a thought
Good luck
If you have no equity in the property, would renting it cover your mortgage? On that basis, you could live where you choose and the rental property would, based upon historical price trends, eventually glean an equity profit for you both
Just a thought
Good luck
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
moving out of london should get you a larger property dependant on where you are moving and why.
To give you an idea, average 2 bed flat I have done mortgages on in london are around 245k.
where i live in Lincoln, 245k would get you a 5 bed detached with double garage.
If you are moving to that extreme, please pace yourself accordingly... would not recommend that you bought the HUGE house but something managable that gave you a bigger house for less outgoings. You then get a better standard of living and as the credit crunch is set to continue you won't have much to worry about.
Anyway good luck
To give you an idea, average 2 bed flat I have done mortgages on in london are around 245k.
where i live in Lincoln, 245k would get you a 5 bed detached with double garage.
If you are moving to that extreme, please pace yourself accordingly... would not recommend that you bought the HUGE house but something managable that gave you a bigger house for less outgoings. You then get a better standard of living and as the credit crunch is set to continue you won't have much to worry about.
Anyway good luck