The saying ‘go big or go home’ should not apply to the residential property market.
In fact, Berry Everitt, MD of the Chas Everitt International property group, says home buyers should adopt exactly the opposite strategy of only buying as much home as they absolutely need right now, at the best possible price in the best possible area.
He says it’s never a good idea for property buyers to stretch themselves to their financial limits, more especially at the moment when consumers are facing ongoing and sizeable hikes in the cost of fuel, food and utilities, not to mention the possibility of further interest rate increases later this year.
He says buyers must leave themselves some room to manoeuvre if and when these increases materialise or they are likely to find themselves unable to meet all their financial obligations and risk losing the home they’ve worked so hard to acquire.
Everitt says at the moment, buyers should be targeting properties that cost at least 25 percent less than the maximum bond they would qualify for – a move that also makes it easier to qualify for a home loan.
“It is also not a good idea for first-time buyers to put off the purchase of a property until they can afford something grand. The market has passed the bottom of the cycle and is on an upward path at the moment, which means that homes are just going to get more and more expensive and that it is going to get harder to qualify for finance, especially if the expected interest rate increases do materialise.”
According to Everitt, homeowners should be looking to get a foothold in the market as soon as possible, in the best area they can afford, even if they have to buy a much smaller home than they originally planned. He says it is much better, for example, to buy an apartment in a sought-after area right now than to delay in order to buy something bigger in that area or worse, to use your money to buy something bigger in a less popular area.
The additional advantages of ‘buying smaller’, he says, include the fact that maintenance and running costs are likely to be much lower, giving owners even more leeway to cope with rising inflation, and that the lower monthly bond instalments give owners the choice of paying more than the minimum required each month.
Everitt says it is a well-known fact that paying even a modest additional amount off your home loan every month will cut the repayment period by years, and save an impressive amount of interest. He says it will also enable you to realise a much bigger profit on the sale of your small property and facilitate a quicker upgrade if that is what you want.