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3-bed BTL Newcastle, £50k purchase price, rent £800 pcm

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    #11
    Don't know NCL well but in the NE outside town centres you can easily get somewhere for £50k. But rental value would typically be more like £400pcm and you are very likely to have benefits claimants as tenants in that price bracket... not exclusively, you might get PhD students perhaps. We own such a property and it's not really fun.

    £150k would typically get you a fairly decent place you could rent for £800pcm I reckon; 3-bed run of the mill semi.
    Originally posted by MaryPoppins
    I'd still not breastfeed a nazi
    Originally posted by vetran
    Urine is quite nourishing

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      #12
      Originally posted by scooterscot View Post
      Always a con. I've got a 1-bed in pollokshields, £615 a month, I'm just wondering if there's elsewhere in the country I can take the money to make it work better. Glasgow is not delivering the yields I'd like.
      I you're interested in a small risk look at NN1.

      Loads like this:
      1 bedroom apartment for sale in Wellington Street, Town Centre, Northampton, NN1

      Will get below asking so close to 50K. Rental £550. Flats were going for over double 6 years ago.

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        #13
        Please don't do it. I did alot of these round Burnley 15 years ago. I considered myself lucky to get out with building society interest levels. It could have been alot worse.

        The only advantage is because its cheapo you can do smaller lots. But the tenants inevitably end up being a mixed bag.

        The only time i might consider it is if used for students.

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          #14
          Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
          Please don't do it. I did alot of these round Burnley 15 years ago. I considered myself lucky to get out with building society interest levels. It could have been alot worse.
          The worst areas got compulsory purchased - maybe you should have hung in there. The former Labour MP (allegedly) made a killing by buying up a few houses in areas which then were purchased and demolished...

          There was some good money to be made - houses that were £3k about 12 years ago are now £30k. I remember hearing some bloke arguing in the Halifax that he was prepared to pay "Tooo n'alf grand, but nah mooeh"
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            #15
            I was recently in Rhodes and property is very cheap. I was thinking about until I looked at Trip Advisor holiday rentals, some people are offering places for £20 a night.

            If I buy something in Rhodes, I think it could be 5 years before rentals recover.

            If something is too cheap there is a reason, find the reason and see if you can live with it.
            Fiscal nomad it's legal.

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              #16
              No comparison, you wouldn't get more than 300 for that rather squalid flat, and no doubt paper thin walls and surrounded by drunken bums.

              The house is cool.
              Last edited by BlasterBates; 13 June 2014, 09:27.
              I'm alright Jack

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                #17
                With even quite modest rental properties selling for way over £250k in many areas now, many people are priced out of doing this. Are there schemes where you can buy into a group who own several properties and you get back the profits like dividends on shares? Why shouldn't you be able to put in £5k to such a scheme like you can shares - even as part of an ISA in a fund or something?
                Originally posted by MaryPoppins
                I'd still not breastfeed a nazi
                Originally posted by vetran
                Urine is quite nourishing

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
                  Please don't do it. I did alot of these round Burnley 15 years ago. I considered myself lucky to get out with building society interest levels. It could have been alot worse.

                  The only advantage is because its cheapo you can do smaller lots. But the tenants inevitably end up being a mixed bag.

                  The only time i might consider it is if used for students.
                  What do you mean, what happened?

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                    #19
                    We looked at buying up north - Luton for example ...but seriously we also considered further up like Newcastle.

                    Eventually we decided to stick to where we know, in certain pockets around the SE (not London). Yes it's a lot more expensive to buy but yield still works out OK. BUT the main thing is that you get the asset price inflation, which you won't get up North - nowhere near the same anyway.

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                      #20
                      Buy one in Berwick, annex the town and then prices will go through the roof with all the oil wealth. Then sell it and buy one in Lerwick for when Shetland does the same trick.
                      The material prosperity of a nation is not an abiding possession; the deeds of its people are.

                      George Frederic Watts

                      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postman's_Park

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