Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
I do not get it!
Message
General information
Forum:
News
Category:
Money
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01171430
Message ID:
01171516
Views:
10
Bejayzus but property prices are high over there! I knew Ireland was defo going up-market, that it's one of the top, best places to live in in the world, but £1+ for a 4-bed semi (duplex for you Americans)!

Mind you, I may well have underestimated my house' value. That was probably the price a few years ago and it's sort of stuck in my head. I haven't ascertained its current value for ages, maybe £0.5M+

>its the exact same here, in 3 years my house has gone up about 75% and its not even near the city, about 20 odd miles away, my parents house is "worth" well in excess of 750k and its just a normal 3 bed semi-d in a reasonable area, some 4 beds in their estate are going for 1m!
>~M
>
>>It's interesting, isn't it. There are young professionals in, say, London, from normal middle-class families (say, their dads were high-ranking bank clerks) who could not afford to buy the house that their similarly classed parents raised them in.
>>
>>Yet, their parents wouldn't have been able to go out clubbin' several times a week, afford holidays in Thailand (or even to fly there), have so many clothes as they, skiing hols, so much disposable income, etc. I live in a very high-rent part of the country, in the SE, south of London, one of the most expensive parts of the country to live. The area of the city where I live is now up and coming, I was lucky to buy my house in the late 80s, at c. £63.5 G (within 4 times our joint income). Now it's worth some £350 G (I WISH!). I doubt I'd be able to afford to buy that now. Yet, when I came here it was dead of a night. Now all the pubs have been done up and are regularly packed out, the local bank has 2 ATMs, etc., etc.
>>
>>What gives!?
- Whoever said that women are the weaker sex never tried to wrest the bedclothes off one in the middle of the night
- Worry is the interest you pay, in advance, for a loan that you may never need to take out.
Previous
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform