Wrong about what? That I think its bull or a couple of greanades let off inside?Ah, realise you're wrong so result to insults
Nowt changed my opinion there boyo.
Wrong about what? That I think its bull or a couple of greanades let off inside?Ah, realise you're wrong so result to insults
MeirAre you saying Trentham Garden is that bad?
Are you aware of the situation re property prices in 2007, followed by what happened in 2008?Wrong about what? That I think its bull or a couple of greanades let off inside?
Nowt changed my opinion there boyo.
The property was on at offers over £73k when I bought it, secured for £75k. If I was to put it on the market now, I can assure you the most it would achieve is £85k. Granted, the sale value was £73k not £75k, so if I sold it tomorrow for £85k that would be £12k profit before expenses based on the sale price not what I paid for it.
I'm on the east coast of Scotland a bit north of Edinburgh. Perfectly nice 2 bed flats in perfectly nice areas available for £85k.Didn't realise you could get anything livable in UK for those sorts of prices these days. Bristol has gone mad on house prices, infected by London lunacy. Lucky to get a garage here for £85. Though living in Scotland to get affordable prices may be a step too far.
What did you pay for your house 50 years ago?
It wasn't 50 years ago. brought for 38k - spent 7k on it and sold it for 39k after 7 years - what's your point.
I don't get what your angle is on it - we sold it for a 6 grand loss
I'm sorry to hear it was worth less after all your DIY than before.
Perhaps you will pick up some tips here.
A 33% increase in 17 years.
But what has the value of the property increased by?
Mentioned earlier in the thread.
Bought for 75k, would sell now for between 80-85k.
Next question ...
He keeps trying for an angle but it isn't working for him, so he will just come back with an insult.
TOLD YOUOver 17 years?
Sounds most unlikely.
If true, you need better investment advice.
A lot of that aspect depends on available jobs in the area concerned. Getting distorted of late due to working from home but largely only in areas that are seen as desirable. Nice village, countrified etc, Also shift in business ideas. maybe tourist related.They also can't get their minds around the fact that not all properties appreciate massively year on year.
The thing is, without meaning to muddy the waters, in my locality there are properties that have gone up quite significantly in value over the past 17 years (to stick with the timescale of my posts) however equally, there are some that haven't. We don't all live in an area where every ... single ... property doubles in value every 3 minutes. Some folk can't seem to grasp that fact, try as they might to argue the point.I see now the reason for lack of understanding.
I no longer have family in Fife or Edinburgh and am out of touch with prices
But interestingly, the wages/house cost unaffordability gap has conspicuously not opened up so much in Scotland.
In parts of England, especially the South, it is incredibly bad.
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Life shouldn't be put on a plate for people....
My parents had to struggle, work hard, make do and mend, save hard for everything they wanted, living in a two up and two down. I likewise had to do the same, and for many years. There was no sense of entitlement, rather it was a matter of providing for oneself, and taking responsibility for oneself.
And getting a house for half of its already affordable price; you omitted that part from your tale of heroic struggle and sacrifice.
And that is where private LLs are supplying a service by providing housing for these people.And people on zero-hours contracts or short-term jobs have no chance of a mortgage, however hard they work and save.