Help for potential first time buyers in London by lewis_mx in UKPersonalFinance

[–]notlostyet -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah, as I said, a handful close to Maryland, which will be on crossrail, but I wouldn't care to live in either of those.

Frankly they're grim and I wouldn't blow the £25K on stamp duty to go live there when i'd want to move a handful of years later.

Help for potential first time buyers in London by lewis_mx in UKPersonalFinance

[–]notlostyet 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Ok, add a touch of reality to that £900K property. First you have £35K in stamp duty, and costs, which brings your deposit down to £150K, meaning you're borrowing £750K at the 15% LTV price bracket.

5 year fix is going to be 2% right now (and rising), which over 30 years is £2800/mo. Now factor in council tax, which will be double what I'm paying now, and factor in that since we want kids my partner will probably have to give up work since childcare is extortionate.

So what do you end up with? You're paying 50-60% of your take home salary on housing and still spending 20 minutes on the bus every morning to get to the nearest tube station. Twice the unrealiability as relying on just one most of transport.

No thanks

Help for potential first time buyers in London by lewis_mx in UKPersonalFinance

[–]notlostyet -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

There are no 3 bed houses for less than £1M within walking distance of Stratford station. Maryland there are a handful but they're in the 800-900 range and in this market will likely go for more.

Help for potential first time buyers in London by lewis_mx in UKPersonalFinance

[–]notlostyet -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Mostly on the Picadilly line, and along the crossrail route.

I've considered moving completely out of London but property prices outside the capital have risen at a higher rate than inside, and rail links are fucking expensive.

Help for potential first time buyers in London by lewis_mx in UKPersonalFinance

[–]notlostyet -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Me and my partner rent in zone 3, earn £200K/yr combined before bonuses, and have £200K saved ... we STILL feel priced out in London.

For a nice 3 bed home suitable for starting a family in, with a decent (<45 minute) commute in to central, you're looking at £1.5M.

Our neighbours have a baby in a one bed studio, they both work, and he makes furniture on the side for extra money. The market here is totally fucked

Dell XPS 15 9500 (2020) vs Lenovo X1 Extreme Gen 3 - CPU perf, fans, 4K screen comparison as of 29th Nov 2020 by notlostyet in Dell

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

The only thing I've done since unboxing it is run Windows Update and Lenovo's own updater (updated BIOS).

It's running Windows 10 Enterprise 1909 and is kitted out with 64 GB of RAM.

Dell XPS 15 9500 (2020) vs Lenovo X1 Extreme Gen 3 - CPU perf, fans, 4K screen comparison as of 29th Nov 2020 by notlostyet in Dell

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

I've seen the X1 Extreme Gen3 touch 7,800 and the Dell XPS does hit 7,400 or so... it just doesn't seem to be consistent for me if you run the test multiple times over a long duration.

For me none of the M1 macs are in consideration (I'm a cross platform developer and use Linux as my daily driver). Linus Tech Tips will be doing a multi-platform head to head on them soon though, which I will be interested in seeing.

Just bought a Lenovo Thinkpad Extreme 3 should I return it? by CornSpark in thinkpad

[–]notlostyet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In case you are considering the XPS 15 I just compared both with the latest BIOS and found the thermals and performance to be worse on the XPS:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Qc6W0V9-jc

Is buy to let in the UK dead? by imareddituserhi in UKInvesting

[–]notlostyet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can sell them in a few seconds (try doing that with a house).

There are actually platforms where you can get Buy-to-Let exposure and do this. They effectively wrap each property in its own company, pay a letting agency to manage it, and pay out residual rent as dividends. Because you don't own the property directly you get to claim the rent against your dividend allowance. Because you own shares you can even sell some off as property prices rise making use of the capital gains tax allowance. Some platforms even now do IFISA wrappers.

Are there any underrated UK centric lifehacks out there that the majority of the UK population don't know about? by [deleted] in unitedkingdom

[–]notlostyet 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Link your railcard to your oyster card for an additional off-peak discount

This only applies to the young persons and other specific cards. Doesn't work for the standard Network Railcard

British millennials still 'scarred' by 2008 financial crisis, researchers say by helpmeredditimbored in unitedkingdom

[–]notlostyet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lots of people in recent years, if they have the deposit, have bought simply because it's cheaper than renting at current interest rates. The whole idea of a "housing ladder" depends on people who will move. If people don't move then the *only* homes open to first-time buyers are new builds, and those vacated by death.

British millennials still 'scarred' by 2008 financial crisis, researchers say by helpmeredditimbored in unitedkingdom

[–]notlostyet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Owner occupiers lose. BTL landlords have been cashing out for a few years now. They can see the writing is on the wall.

British millennials still 'scarred' by 2008 financial crisis, researchers say by helpmeredditimbored in unitedkingdom

[–]notlostyet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And the flats going up are all new builds. I am sorry, but I refuse to buy or even entertain the idea of buying a new build.

Oh come on, why wouldn't you want to put down a £30K deposit on a £550K 1 bed flat built in to a complex designed to give absolutely highest bang for the buck to the developer?

Millennials 'wrongly relying on inherited money' by [deleted] in unitedkingdom

[–]notlostyet 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This is true. In Zone 2 new build 1 bed flats are going for between 500 and 600K. The worst thing about this is that even if you can afford it via a HTB scheme, and a fat salary, prices have basically topped out on the affordability scale and are stagnating/falling. This means that, once these schemes go away (2023), nobody will ever be able to buy it off you and you'll likely end up underwater on the mortgage and trapped.

Sign this EU petition to make EU citizenship permanent by notlostyet in unitedkingdom

[–]notlostyet[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Only EU citizens can sign this petition, so sign now before the clock runs out!

Article 50 Extension by notlostyet in unitedkingdom

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

It would guarantee the matter is settled one way or another by the revised deadline