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Does it make sense to get a second mortgage on a second property for Buy to Let

Personal Finance & Money Asked by stuart stevenson on May 28, 2021

I am a UK resident and home-owner with a mortgage that is 2.5 times my pretax annual salary.

Having investigated the price of my home now since I bought it, I was pleasantly surprised by the return on investment from the increase in house price alone.

This makes me think that a rental property would be a good investment because the rental income, even through a letting agency, would more than cover the mortgage payment and I could accrue more in the returns from the rise in property price.

My understanding is that I could borrow another 2 times my salary on a mortgage and this makes sense since the returns far outreach the costs.

Is there anything that else that I need to consider? Risk? Credit rating? Anything else I’m not seeing? I can’t seem to find a downside.

Edit: Thanks to all the contributors. Something to think about, indeed.

7 Answers

For a buy to let mortgage you will typically need at least 25% deposit and it will be a higher interest rate than a residential mortgage.

Also you need to factor in that you may not have the property occupied 100% of the time, and that you will have maintenance costs on the property as well.

Bottom line: being a small time landlord can make a small return, but nothing like as large as it sounds like you may be imagining, and there is risk.

Answered by Vicky on May 28, 2021

If you are a higher-rate taxpayer, or your income from the rental (gross — you can’t deduct the mortgage interest, though you can deduct other costs) would push you into the higher-rate bracket, be aware that as of last year you’ll only get a 20% tax credit for your buy-to-let mortgage interest, but you’ll be paying 40% (or more for very high incomes) tax on the rent that you receive. That’s quite likely to move you from profit to loss. https://www.which.co.uk/money/tax/income-tax/tax-on-property-and-rental-income/buy-to-let-mortgage-tax-relief-changes-explained-atnsv0j6j782

Answered by Mike Scott on May 28, 2021

Risks?

  • Your tenant may not pay rent. Eviction is often a long and costly process. And in the worst case the tenant will leave your property heavily damaged
  • The region may fall out of favour and the house depreciates.
  • The building may not have seen the necessary maintenance in the past and you will be spending a lot of money soon to repair a broken heating, leaking roof, etc.
  • The building may burn down or get otherwise destroyed and the insurance will not pay all of it. Or you are fighting for a long time to get your insurance to pay. All while you cannot collect any rent of course.

Buying a property to rent out can be a good investment if the fundamentals are positive: a region with a healthy housing market and a building in good shape at the right location at a reasonable price. Unfortunately, you will not be the only one looking for this, so these properties are hard to come by.

Answered by Manziel on May 28, 2021

I would offer some general broad advice:

Say you are getting 1 or 2 rental properties in the UK. (So this does not apply to someone who owns streets full of rental properties!)

  1. The income and costs from the rental as such are not of much consequence one way or the other.

  2. The whole entire issue at hand is capital gains.

It could be that area of the UK, that in 20-30 years the price has increased incredibly.

If that is the case, with the leverage you have had an enormous, epic, lifetime win. Hero move. You're a rich man. Great.

On the other hand - it could be that in 20-30 years, the price is pretty flat or has just gone up a little with inflation. In that case it's a bust - the whole exercise was a wash and pretty much pointless.

Unfortunately that's what it comes down to.

You are really just making a play on:

... "will the price increase greatly in the next 30 yrs or so?" As you know, that is incredibly true in some or many cases (in the UK and elsewhere), but you can think of plenty of places where it wouldn't work out.

So unfortunately it's one huge guess on future prices in that particular area.

Owning real estate is:

  • crap if the price is flat or only increasing a little.

  • spectacularly awesome if the price is heading north.

It's a big bet.

Answered by Fattie on May 28, 2021

Other answers already cover a lot of the risks, but I wanted to focus on this sentence:

rental income, even through a letting agency, would more than cover the mortgage payment and I could accrue more in the returns from the rise in property price.

Any gain accrued from an increase in the value of the property can only be realised when you sell it. So as a long-term investment, it may well be profitable - but in the short term, you need to have a source of funds to pay the many and varied costs associated with owning a rental property.

It's common for buy-to-let mortgages to be interest only, because the monthly payment for repayment mortgages is often too high to make much monthly profit (if any). You will need a contingency fund to pay for emergency repairs, or a new boiler, or rewiring when the electrical inspection report shows a serious issue, or simply to cover the costs when the property is empty - so how are you going to pay for that?

My understanding is that I could borrow another 2 times my salary on a mortgage

BTL mortgages are normally computed based on (a) the expected rent, and (b) your salary - though in my experience, it is the former that dominates. So you're not wrong, but I'd argue that the expected rent is the more important factor.

But before you even get there, you're going to need a deposit. BTL mortgages cost more than residential ones, and the best rates tend to be found when your loan-to-value ratio is 60% or below. So do you have a 40% deposit?

Answered by Steve Melnikoff on May 28, 2021

I did something similar a couple of years ago. In my case my residential (and only) home had gone up in value so I had some equity. I also realised the home we were living in had potential income as a student property, being close to a university, so we simultaneously acquired a rental property and also released enough funds from the equity to move home by 'flipping' our residential home. We remortgaged the current home and its residential mortgage into a buy to let mortgage at 75% of its NEW valuation. After paying off the residential mortgage, we had enough cash left over to to pay the deposit/fees for the new residential mortgage on our new home. The whole venture was funded purely from the released equity in our previous home and we now have a student rental property providing extra income for our family.

Answered by Michael B on May 28, 2021

Buy To Let used to be a no-brainer. But be careful. The wind is changing. Tenants' rights are growing. Regulation and licensing are becoming increasingly expensive. Punitive taxation for those perceived as 'rich' is just around the corner. Unless you have cash available, investment property may no longer be an easy money-maker.

Answered by Laurence Payne on May 28, 2021

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