Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

How long is a piece of string?

 

No perfect answer for your question.  Each person’s situation is different.

 

For me renting is the answer in Thailand.  Owning only in the USA.

 

For whatever reason being able to grab my passport and walk away on short notice if needed.  PRICELESS!

 

Even forfeiting my Vespa 150 and my wardrobe.

Edited by G_Money
  • Thumbs Up 2
Posted (edited)

How long have you lived in TH, and how many different places ?

 

Where are you located now ?  Just noticed HH/Cha Am area.

 

How long do you plan on owning it ?  More than 12 years to be even close to a financial break even, relative to other expenses.

 

$125k USD = ฿4.3M ... or ฿30k monthly rent for 12 years.  Of course your age will be a factor.  What it will be worth in 12 yrs, along with condo fees.   If getting full ROI, then very nice, you've lived here 12 ish year, rent free.  Even if market drops 50%, still should beat rent.

 

3 basic question.  Don't expect to make a profit, if and when selling, especially if owning 5-10 yrs.  RE is an excellent investment, IF, it has land, as that seem to be the only part of it that appreciates.   I've had 3 house builds, sold 2, and only the land appreciation gave us any return/profit when selling.   Profit & living basically rent free, so all good.

 

Location location location of course, but if your budget is $125k USD, then you won't be in any primo, appreciating location, usually.  Or it will be rather small.  Can you do small, and have you done small yet.  I would think it gets old very fast.

 

Excellent advice below, and yes, definitely rent for a year, at any place you plan on buying in.

Edited by KhunLA
  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted (edited)

Most buildings have rentals available… I would rent in a building before buying… You can see if you really like the building and neighborhood… While renting you also get to scope out all the units available for sale and most likely get a better deal… 
 

Remember it’s easy to buy but not so easy to sell…

Edited by BKKKevin
  • Agree 2
Posted (edited)

Right now a 10 year US Treasuries give you a 4.5% return…

That translates to about 15,000 baht/month for your $125k…

My bet is any ~$4 million baht condo you find to buy will rent for less than 15,000 baht/month…

Edited by BKKKevin
  • Haha 1
Posted (edited)

Op, if you buy, make yourself aware of the tax rules for bringing money in.

        and how to avoid a large tax bill. plenty of info on threads on this forum.

 

Ps  if your old, rent if still young buy. bought my first condo in 2000

      still have it, and it  owes me nothing, just my take on it.

 

 

 

Edited by quake
Posted
12 hours ago, cowboys2008 said:

I'm retiring soon. Should I buy a condo for about $125,000 or rent?

Rent. Give it some time before you buy.

Posted

For a retiree, renting is probably the way to go, financially.  Can. it work out? Sure.  But you could also lose some money or end up in a place you don't actually want to be.  

 

I'm 73 and I can't imagine purchasing a place and actually having it work out, financially. The best case realistic scenario: I eventually get my money back minus the upkeep costs and the lost opportunity cost of sinking all that cash into a property. Still, I'm still thinking about buying something, just for the hell of it.  It would be fun to have a place that I could furnish just the way I wanted. Of course, size is a consideration. My current rental is a 39 square meter studio.  Renting is one thing, but I would never buy anything this small.  

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   1 member




×
×
  • Create New...