The mind-set and tactics you employ to buy your first Aylesbury
buy to let property needs to be different to the tactics and methodology of
buying a home for yourself to live in. The main difference is when purchasing
your own property, you may well pay a little more to get the home you (and your
family) want, and are less likely to compromise. When buying for your own use,
it is only human nature you will want the best, so that quite often it is at
the top end of your budget (because as my
parents always used to tell me – you get what you pay for in this world!).
Yet with a buy to let property, if your goal is a higher
rental return – a higher price doesn’t always equate to higher monthly returns
– in fact quite the opposite. Inexpensive Aylesbury properties can bring in
bigger monthly returns. Most landlords use the phrase ‘yield’ instead of
monthly return. To calculate the yield on a buy to let property one basically takes
the monthly rent, multiplies it by 12 to get the annual rent and then divides
it by the value of the property.
This means, if one increases the value of the property using
this calculation, the subsequent yield drops. Or to put it another way, if a Aylesbury
buy to let landlord has the decision of two properties that create the same amount
of monthly rent, the landlord can increase their rental yield by selecting the lower
priced property.
To give you an idea of the sort of returns in Aylesbury...
Now of course
these are averages and there will always be properties outside the lower and
upper ranges in yields: they are a fair representation of the gross yields you
can expect in the Aylesbury area.
As we move forward, with the total amount of buy to let
mortgages amounting to £199,310,614,000 in the country, landlords need to be
aware of the investment performance of their property, especially in the era of
tax increases and tax relief reductions. Landlords are looking to maximise
their yield - and are doing so by buying cheaper properties.
However, before everyone in Aylesbury starts selling their
upmarket properties and buying cheap ones, yield isn’t the only factor when
deciding on what Aylesbury buy to let property to buy. Void periods (i.e. the time when there isn’t
a tenant in the property between tenancies) are an important factor and those
properties at the cheaper end of the rental spectrum can suffer higher void
periods too. Apartments can also have service charges and ground rents that
aren’t accounted for in these gross yields. Landlords can also make money if
the value of the property goes up and for those Aylesbury landlords who are
looking for capital growth, an altered investment strategy may be required.
In Aylesbury, for example, over the last 20 years, this is
how the average price paid for the four different types of Aylesbury property
have changed…
·
Aylesbury Detached Properties have increased in
value by 236.7%
·
Aylesbury Semi-Detached Properties have
increased in value by 291.6%
·
Aylesbury Terraced Properties have increased in
value by 295.7%
·
Aylesbury Apartments have increased in value by 288.9%
It is very much a balancing act of yield,
capital growth and void periods when buying in Aylesbury. Every landlord’s
investment strategy is unique to them. If you would like a fresh pair of eyes
to look at your portfolio, be you a private landlord that doesn’t use a letting
agent or a landlord that uses one of my competitors – then feel free to drop in
and let’s have a chat.
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