My 2 cents wrote:leona wrote:The Big question is:
Should people continue paying rent to landlords OR take home loans and own their own homes?
It is the cost that is an issue. rent on nyayo embakasi flats is 20k and mortgage is 56k. my view is that instead of buying on mortgage one should rent and invest the rest. If they are disciined one day they can buy a home on cash basis or borrow very little. This way tons of interest can be avoided.
@My 2 Cents;
Have you factored-in the price appreciation of houses? And also the ever-rising rents?
Experience has shown me that rent in Nairobi doubles every 7 - 10 years. Thus expect the 20k flat to cost about 40k by 2020.
BTW, is this the New Nyayo Embakassi old the older one? I know that the first phase mortgage is Sh28,341 exactly and that's where you cane get 20k - 25k rent, depending on you negotiation skill.
These houses were fetching 12k - 15k rent in 2002....but the mortgage was still the same Sh28,341.
People assume that it is easy to save for a house and pay for it in cash and they forget two things:
FIRST; that it is very difficult to muster enough discipline to save, and
SECOND: that the prices of houses are also increasing.
Let me illustrate with my own personal experience:
In 2002, I signed up for a mortgage to buy the flat below the one I was living in. I had been paying Sh16k rent. The purchase cost was sh2.5m and the the mortgage installments came to Sh31k pm.
Today, the rent for the area averages 30k - 35k, but the mortgage is still 31k.
My eighbour recently sold her flat earlier this year for sh7.5m
In view of the above, taking a mortgage does make sense; doesn't it?
Nothing is real unless it can be named; nothing has value unless it can be sold; money is worthless unless you spend it.