TwickenhamCyclist
Guest
There are still some cheap spots outside St Pauls's I believe! No rent, no bills!
wow... I thought I had it bad. I pay £540 mortgage for a nice 3 bed semi In a decent area in Birmingham and about 15 minutes drive from the city centre and im only 28 and have 3 kids. God knows what id do if i had to pay nearly double that for rent!
I live just outside Bristol and we are paying £780/month for a 3 bed end terrace. To buy a house like this would be about £200,000. We somehow would need to find £20,000 to secure just a 10% deposit on a house. Then the mortgage would be at least £1000/month even at these historically low interest rates.
I understand negative equity is bad for homeowners, but at least they "own" a house. My wife and I have a very decent combined income and are still struggling to see how long it will take to secure a deposit.
The market has to collapse. I don't know who or what is to blame for current high prices in the south, presumably supply and demand has a certain amount of blame attached to it, but what impact does buy to let, immigration and the attitude of homeowners to treat houses as investments instead of a place to live have on the current market?
Councils and housing associations in England and Wales had nearly 100,000 of their own properties sitting empty at the end of last year. Doing something about those would help.Thatcher had a great idea, flog the council housing stock to the tenants.
Unfortuanatly she forgot to add that for every house sold a new one should be built (or bought) by the council for the next generation of council tenants (who would eventually buy the house, and so one more could be built or bought)
End result is we are now so many properties short that if (according to the Daily Mail) we need to build 200 houses a day for the next 23 years just to catch up.
Councils and housing associations in England and Wales had nearly 100,000 of their own properties sitting empty at the end of last year. Doing something about those would help.
Hang on a sec. From http://www.communiti...gstatistics2010 there were 3.8 million social renters (possibly England only or perhaps UK as a whole, not read the whole document). 100,000 is 2.6%; which surely could be accounted for by properties being temporarily vacant due to one tenant having moved and another not yet moved in - or indeed due to upgrades or similar?
Councils and housing associations in England and Wales had nearly 100,000 of their own properties sitting empty at the end of last year. Doing something about those would help.
Many of those are unlettable and Up North - no-one wants to live where there aren't any jobs.Councils and housing associations in England and Wales had nearly 100,000 of their own properties sitting empty at the end of last year. Doing something about those would help.
Those 100,000 will be mainly in economic blackspots.The uncontrolled free market takes no prisoners.
No, the figure is for council/HA houses empty for six months or more. Some will of course have been empty for much longer - in Leeds we have several council developments from the 70/80s which have been all but derelict for three or four years.Hang on a sec. From http://www.communiti...gstatistics2010 there were 3.8 million social renters (possibly England only or perhaps UK as a whole, not read the whole document). 100,000 is 2.6%; which surely could be accounted for by properties being temporarily vacant due to one tenant having moved and another not yet moved in - or indeed due to upgrades or similar?