I was reading the ad for a house for sale which happened to mention a potential rental value, which worked out at around 5.4% yield per year
Take off income tax which could be 40-45%++ if you have a job or other properties but even if just basic rate, the return is then 4.3% a year...Then obviously need to maintain and keep it insured & legal, brings it down to about 3-3.5% and that's without the risk of having no, or worse a bad, tenant
Putting aside other investments (stocks etc.) simply sticking the money in a savings account offers that return with zero risk, and zero work
I sympathise that for tenants the supply of property is super low and rents are high, but is that because there's no incentive to be a landlord?
My only thought is the situation is intentional to make buying easier, but most have the familiar issue of finding a deposit
Would I be onto something with an idea for a fund for investors with capital to put this into, which aspiring homeowners could borrow from to secure their mortgage deposit... So would-be landlords are profiting from the property market in a more (tax- & otherwise) efficient way without "hogging" properties & at the same time it's helping struggling people to buy their homes?
Surely there's a reason this hasn't been done before 🤔