Reader:
I wonder what you will do if you were me- can you talk to yourself?
I finally sold my maisonette for >$1mil, as it almost hit 30 years old.
I had paid up my HDB loan a few years ago, so have this full amount available in cash and CPF.
Although $1mil may sound like a lot, there is hardly any property to buy if I rule out HDB options.
My husband and I are in our mid 40s, and our income do not qualify us for BTO nor ECs. Newer resale HDBs may not be the option due to same issue of lease decay and no certainty of SERS...
If I look in the condo space:
- newer 99-year lease condo of at least 1200 sq ft- the location will be outskirts and not within walking distance to MRT station
- older freehold/ 999-years condo of the same size- good locations walkable to MRT stations will be at least $1.8mil at the lowest...
I cannot imagine paying $2mil and above for a property- all the cash (even if I have) will be locked up in ONE property...and cannot use as war chest or emergency fund in the event of unemployment...
What will you do in my case?? I solved one problem of selling off my old HDB, but seemed to have created another one...
AK:
This is why many people say there is no point in property prices going higher if the only property they have is their home.
They would need a replacement property and it would probably cost the same or more, especially if they are not able to get a new HDB flat (i.e. BTO) as a replacement.
If our home is an ageing HDB flat, it makes sense to consider selling it in view of the lease decay issue.
However, the issue really becomes more of a problem when the flat has less than 60 years left to its lease. I blogged about this, if you remember.
I feel that you might have been in too much of a hurry to sell.
For anyone selling their flat and if they need a replacement property of comparable size, they should ask if they qualify for a new HDB flat (i.e. BTO).
My sister successfully applied for a new 5 room flat and only put up her old 4 room flat for sale after her new flat was ready, for example.
For anyone selling their flat and do not need a replacement property of comparable size, downsizing is the obvious answer.
A reader shared her family's experience of downsizing and downsizing again, for example. They are quite happy.
Without the BTO option, like you have shared, you are probably not going to find a new similar size property nor one with a much longer remaining land lease selling at the price or lower than the price you sold your 30 year old flat for.
The only reason why I would find myself in your shoes would probably be because I want to leave the family home as a legacy to my children.
Why sell the flat which has another 69 years left to the lease when I am already in my 40s, otherwise?
However, as I do not wish to be asset rich and cash poor (which is the impression I get when you said you cannot imagine having $2 million locked up in ONE property), I would look for the largest and newest resale HDB flat (i.e. 5 years old) $1 million (or lesser) can buy.
It might be smaller than my old flat but it would have to do.
Related posts:
1. Downsizing our homes.
2. Problem with older flats.
3. Legacy or location?