Originally Posted by
Iani
MAYBE as Simon said, an option is renting out your UK property. That has got me thinking - not because I'm planning on doing this, but finances and costing has always interested me.
With the economy as it stands, forecasts (aka guesses) and changes to the rules as announced in the budget, perhaps this is most viable if you no longer have a mortgage - well I'd personally only say it's viable without a mortgage.
So, let's say you have a house in my area, and it's a starter home in a decent enough area - be worth circa 100 to 130k (Don't laugh, this is a good place with much culture, easy transport links and near one of the biggest financial centres outside of London).
So here's your options:
Sell up and use the "nest egg". £130,000 - how far will that get you to last "forever" - your retirement years? You're best at working that out.
Sell up, put that in a UK bank and "earn" from interest. Well frankly you'll be lucky there getting a decent interest rate, but if you can somehow build up over a few years in ISA's (You can't of course put that amount in at one go in a year) then it's going to be a bit less than 3k a year.
Rent it out - now we are in the realms of hope to goodness your tenants aren't idiots and wreck the place, don't pay up or it isn't empty for too long between lettings, but if all goes well, you could for the type of house I'm thinking of, in this local area you'd get £450 to £500 a month, maybe a bit more if your house is worth that bit more.
Obviously in the south where houses are more expensive, yes you'd get more by selling, but you will also achieve higher rents, so the ratios of earnings are going to be similar
But by using my example, let's say then £5400 a year, but less letting fees, maintenance, checks etc.
Fall lucky and get about 5k a year. Obviously not enough to live on, but combine this with company pension, other income - and it could just turn an uncertainty into a portfolio you could manage on.