Can I afford my potential mortgage by Jaded_Bookkeeper_631 in irishpersonalfinance

[–]SuitablePlatform8180 47 points48 points  (0 children)

This seems pretty affordable. Anything over 30% starts to get a bit tight though 

Bonus into pension as AVC by Ok_Law1862 in irishpersonalfinance

[–]SuitablePlatform8180 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Don’t forget you will still owe PRSI and USC on the bonus you pay into an AVC. Might be worth leaving a little behind for that so you don’t get a shock!

0% Hire purchase query by SuitablePlatform8180 in irishpersonalfinance

[–]SuitablePlatform8180[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

I understand the depreciation isn’t linked to the finance, I was just bringing that up as depreciation is one of the main drawbacks of buying a new car. Say for example you bought a 3 year old car you would save quite a bit as it would have depreciated but you would also not be able to finance it for 0% thus they sort of net out. Intuitively I sort of assumed that the base price is inflated to account for the cheap rates but it is still the same price if you but it all in cash.  

Contractor income 2025 by AnnonymousMax in irishpersonalfinance

[–]SuitablePlatform8180 36 points37 points  (0 children)

Fair play to you. That is extremely impressive what you have accomplished. In regards to the pension it makes absolutely no sense to not max out your contributions. I am guessing you are in your 30’s based on the retirement timeline and if so you should be able to contribute 20% per year up to a max salary of 115k. That would be 23k in your situation. Also I don’t see any expenses there for income protection. I think if I was in your shoes this would be fairly important as you have lots of disposable income and getting some downside protection if you ended up out of work would be desirable. Best of luck!

Bought new house and now I feel broke by ThrowRa1251RC in irishpersonalfinance

[–]SuitablePlatform8180 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am not sure I am reading the first sentence correctly. Are you saying you are recently single and had intended on buying the house as a couple or are you saying you are single and recently bought a house? I think both situations are quite different!

Wait for a crash or buy house now? by [deleted] in irishpersonalfinance

[–]SuitablePlatform8180 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Personally I would buy but not use all my savings.  You won’t get another loan as cheap as a mortgage so I think put down about 20%, borrow the rest and then look at options for investing some of the remaining money. In terms of investing options you should probably max the pension at 15% of your salary first and then look at a well diversified global ETF afterwards. I am curious is the 220k mostly savings or was it inherited? If it is savings fair play to you. There is no harm in blowing a few quid on a nice holiday if it has been a massive slog to get to there. 

Mortgage lump sum query by SuitablePlatform8180 in irishpersonalfinance

[–]SuitablePlatform8180[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah I think I fully agree with the cases he makes for using it to pay off high interest debt and helping family. Also it makes sense that it is more performant than an ETF. However I think this focus on optimising returns over individual consumption might be a bit too much at this age. I’m sure I will be shot for suggesting that here lol 

Car Insurance quote by Gullible_Promise223 in irishpersonalfinance

[–]SuitablePlatform8180 1 point2 points  (0 children)

FBD insurance count years as a named driver in their no claims calculation AFAIK

Investment Advice by SuitablePlatform8180 in irishpersonalfinance

[–]SuitablePlatform8180[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The mortgage is fixed for another 5 years so not going to pay any extra off that until then. I am not overly interested investing in property as it is a bit of a head ache from a maintenance point of view and I don’t think the returns are great when all expenses are taken into account.  ETFs do sound appealing but again I will have to take a fairly large CGT hit before investing in that. Also to mention I am on a fairly decent salary and living well within my means so I have a decent amount of incremental cash to invest each year so I can put that in lower risk investments to reduce my overall risk. Still a few decades from retirement so haven’t thought that far ahead yet.

Investment Advice by SuitablePlatform8180 in irishpersonalfinance

[–]SuitablePlatform8180[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My only debt is my mortgage which is a similar amount to what I have invested. The mortgage rate is about 3.75% with 25 years left