I've just spent a year doing a financial planning and counselling course (in own time using own money) so I speak with a least a minimum of knowledge...
£30k for round figures...
Lets take the Skipton building society...I know this establishment and trust it...I don't agree with some of it's policies but it's a money making firm with it's own bills to pay...
They will loan you four times your pay...This IMO is too much but a bull housing market means anything less just comes no-where near you achieving bricks and mortar...
4 x 30,000 = £120000.
Lets say you've managed to save
£6000 which nicely works out at 5% deposit on a
£126,000 house/flat...You'll pay stamp duty of
£1260 due to being just above the min threshold and you'll probably incur a loan to value (LTV) penalty due to your small deposit of around
£2500 or you can go for a mortgage with less competitive intrest rate (they'll get it back off you in one way or another!)...this can be added to your mortgage along with probably
£500-700 of arrangement fees...you'll have to find the
£3-400 search fee's and the
£500-700 legal fees...
Lets see how this stacks up then
mortgage size =
120000+2500+700 =£123200
initial outlay =
6000+400+700+1260 = £8360
A repayment mortgage based on a rate of 5.5% over 25 years will be
£756 a month (figures used will and can change but this is a generalisation based on median values)
Add on a grade 'B' council tax charge of
£100 per month
Water and sewage of
£25 per month
Electric of
£25 per month
Gas of
£35 per month
telephone of
£20 per month
Biuldings and contents
£30 per month
756 + 100 + 25 + 25 + 35 + 20 + 30 = £991
I'm going to say that a Cpl techie clears
£1650 a month (readjust this figure for your selves or if its totally out)
1650 - 991 = £659
Thats just the basics for just shy of a grand...There's no beer, food (notice my priorities there
DT_Xtremez_15: ), broadband, car running costs, treats for the kids, clothes, school trips, Christmas pressies and costs etc etc etc...
SO...The very long winded point I am making to the 'person' who I think was drinking and typing is that a person on
30 k could afford a house if he was single and had the ability to save
£8360 or was married and his wife worked or if not then they intend to live the life of a monk...
HOWEVER...Where the fook are you going to find a house (outside of perhaps Lincoln) for
£126,000 in the UK that you would actually want to live in?????
Keep it up Hitback...