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Buying properties with short remaining land leases.

Thursday, July 6, 2017

Reader:
I was looking to buy a shoebox condo until I read your blog. 


I turned 35 recently and will try to get my own BTO 2 rm HDB flat. 

This will help me achieve financial freedom earlier. :)


However, a friend (same age) just bought a 40 yro HDB flat. 

He didn't think age was important but I told him about the lease decay issue. 

He cannot sell the flat right away because of the MOP. 

Do you have any thoughts on this?




AK:

I will share what I feel are situations when it might make sense to buy properties with relatively short remaining land leases.

1. If we are making it a home with no intention of reselling or leaving a legacy, make sure that the remaining lease is enough to last us till we are 90 years old. 

People are living longer and we are expected to live till almost 90 these days. 




In fact, to be safe, let's make it 95 years old. 

So, if your friend is 35 and bought a resale flat that has 60 years left to the lease, that is not too bad. 

Well, let us hope he doesn't live to be a hundred. 

Alamak. Bad AK! Bad AK!





2. If we are buying a property with a relatively short remaining land lease as an investment, the rental yield should be far higher than a property that has a longer remaining land lease or is sitting on freehold land.

So, if a property has 50 years left to the lease, it should, simplistically, have a rental yield that is way higher than that of a comparable property with a 100 years left to the lease. 

Otherwise, everything else being equal, it would mean offering a significantly lower price for the property with a shorter remaining land lease.





(There is lesser room for error buying a property with a much shorter remaining land lease. A one year vacancy for a property with a 50 year land lease is 2% of its productive life gone while it is 1% for a property with a 99 year land lease.)

Of course, point number 2 should be relevant to someone considering point number 1 as well. 

It will help to ground us in our decision making process and, hopefully, not pay ridiculously high prices for properties.






Guide for Resale Flat Sellers and Buyers.
Related post:
Buy 99 years LH or FH properties?

Which HDB flat to buy?

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Reader says:

I have read your posts and have been following you for quite some time. 

Have been reading your posts on purchasing properties and following up on the replies. Really interesting :) 

I would like to seek your advice for choosing a HDB flat. Hope you don’t mind helping me out.





I want to buy a flat that is more accessible and convenient, closer to the central region. 

I plan to sell the unit after 5 years of stay when my financial is ready for an upgrade. 

However the flats in the estate I am interested in are older. 

My agent keeps telling me NE region is newer and have more potential.






I really like the 20 year old resale flat which is closer to town but for the same price, I can get a 5 year old flat in NE Singapore.

I feel that the flat in NE is not so convenient even with the LRT lines and bus service there. 

It is still quite a distance away from central area.

For the amount of money I can afford I know I can’t get both new and centralised HDB flat, 鱼和熊掌不可兼得.. Please teach me how to 取舍..





AK says:

If you are buying a home to stay for the rest of your life, an older flat which has more than 70 years left to the lease is OK.

If you are thinking of selling the flat a few years down the road, an older flat could have issues especially now that more people are aware of what a shorter lease means.

You decide. ;)






Related posts:
1. HDB flat is 37 years old...
2. Buying a 99 years LH property?
3. Buy resale flat or new BTO flat?
Which one would AK choose?


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