Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Is It Worth Putting In Central Heating?
13 Answers
I have a 2 bed maisonette which is rented out. It's in a not very nice area so is not worth much- maybe £105k. I have ten years left on the interest only mortgage before I have to hand it back / sell it. Isn't worth putting in
gas central heating? It has storage heating at present. Would paying out thousands now result in a return when I came
To sell it or shall I keep it basic?
gas central heating? It has storage heating at present. Would paying out thousands now result in a return when I came
To sell it or shall I keep it basic?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Scarlett. 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.I am not sure what 'hand it back' means
if it means that your holding ( "head lease" ) has less than ten years to run then 'no' on any analysis
do you get increased rent if you put it in
that is is there a benefit ?
putting it in cant be that expensive - say £2000
( I mean a boiler change is around £600 where I live)
and so your pay back is under one year
- actually the tax situation is fraught - it probably WON'T count as "repair" - ie a tax expense against rent. You arent repairing anything - deffo capital improvement. so the cost would count against CGT when you sell
also from April 4 this year you are gonna lose your tax expense of mortgage interest relief .....
if you want to know what the calculation is
when money also loses its value over years then
you do a discounted cash flow calculation
here
[I have CH in all my lets]
bit of a technical answer
sozza - which section are we in ?
if it means that your holding ( "head lease" ) has less than ten years to run then 'no' on any analysis
do you get increased rent if you put it in
that is is there a benefit ?
putting it in cant be that expensive - say £2000
( I mean a boiler change is around £600 where I live)
and so your pay back is under one year
- actually the tax situation is fraught - it probably WON'T count as "repair" - ie a tax expense against rent. You arent repairing anything - deffo capital improvement. so the cost would count against CGT when you sell
also from April 4 this year you are gonna lose your tax expense of mortgage interest relief .....
if you want to know what the calculation is
when money also loses its value over years then
you do a discounted cash flow calculation
here
[I have CH in all my lets]
bit of a technical answer
sozza - which section are we in ?
Kitchen was new when I moved in (2002) and still very good nick, bathroom same- I replaced both when I bought the house as a condition of the mortgage. Windows are all listed though, so the original 1870 ones with secondary double glazing on the back ones. The kitchen downstairs has a new window and new back door. The only benefit I was hoping for was to be able to sell it for more in ten years time when the 25 years are up. I recently put in new updated storage heaters which probably cost the same as central heating would have, thinking about it. Gas wasn't available in the street when I moved in.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.