For
many of us, financial uncertainty seems to be a key feature of life; saving and
investing for the future in a time of low interest rates has become immensely
challenging.
Many
people who have accumulated savings, inherited money or wound up with a
significant sum to invest, look to the buy to let property market in order
provide for their futures.
In
this blog post we will explore the best ways of ensuring that buy to let
properties can provide for you and your family in retirement.
The golden years
In
the decade between 1997 and 2007, property seemed to
be all anyone was talking about. The TV stations were bursting at the seams
with programmes about property ladders, property fortunes and property
presenters.
It
was clear, in hindsight, that the property bubble was about to burst.
The
moment that a critical mass of people enter the market in one go, assuming that
property is a licence to print money, the count down to a crash begins.
In
2008, an era of cheap borrowing, available
credit and rising property prices came to an abrupt end and so did the dreams of many
who hoped to become property millionaires overnight.
All is not lost, however
Get
rich quick schemes aside, property can still be a sensible way of investing for
the future; the rental sector is growing rapidly and predicted to continue
expanding over the next decade.
Unless
housing is built at a pace to meet demand, it is likely that rents and
therefore rental income will continue to rise.
Most private landlords who own a buy
to let property are small time property investors with one or two
properties.
These
days, the more risk averse banks are reluctant to lend to landlords with dozens
of properties, recognising that they represent unacceptable default risk
levels.
Banks
have to lend money to someone, however, or they cease being banks, so you might
find you can get a buy to let mortgage by presenting yourself as a low risk
borrower with few liabilities.
Bank, building society or broker
Bank
lending rules have become far more stringent since April 2014 and few are now happy
to consider a buy to let mortgage without an existing property to put up as
collateral.
Helping the next generation
Housing
costs in London and other major cities have sky rocketed in recent years and
even affluent young professionals find themselves priced out of the housing
market.
If
you have grown up children and dependents who are unable to buy, you might be
able to provide for them and find an investment opportunity at the same time.
You
will need landlords’ home insurance if you choose to become a buy to let
landlord, as regular insurance policies will not be considered valid and the
first concern of any new landlord is ‘insuring my property against possible
damage or loss.’
The
government’s pension reforms in
the past year have left many retirees with a lump sum of cash that they can
invest as they see fit, no longer having to purchase an annuity.
By investing in buy to
let properties, retirees may be able to use rental incomes to supplement their
pensions, and have a property to leave to the next generation in their will.
For more information please do not hesitate to
contact the team at Ward Williams Financial Services Ltd on 01932 830664 or
by email on wwfs@wardwilliams.co.uk.
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