pendodave
Tour Rookie
At a time of life when friends, family, shopping, good public transport and health (and other) services are very important, it's really not always the best thing.Surely a lot of people in London sell up & move when retiring.
At a time of life when friends, family, shopping, good public transport and health (and other) services are very important, it's really not always the best thing.Surely a lot of people in London sell up & move when retiring.
If they've got any sense.Surely a lot of people in London sell up & move when retiring.
If they've got any sense.
I understand living there while you're working because that's where the high wages are but when you retire, why stay, especially if you own your own house.
Sell your £1m house, move up north a bit and buy a smaller house for £300,000 and use the other £700k for whatever you want.
And you can save a fortune on golf membership.
And if you choose wisely, low crime rate, good facilities, clean air, friendly local communities and peaceful country walks on your door step.
But, each to their own.
Is precisely what me & Mrs B are in process of doing...If they've got any sense.
I understand living there while you're working because that's where the high wages are but when you retire, why stay, especially if you own your own house.
Sell your £1m house, move up north a bit and buy a smaller house for £300,000 and use the other £700k for whatever you want.
And you can save a fortune on golf membership.
And if you choose wisely, low crime rate, good facilities, clean air, friendly local communities and peaceful country walks on your door step.
But, each to their own.
If you own your £1m house but still have £750,000 on the mortgage are you a millionaire ?12% of property prices in London are over £1M apparently. So there must be a lot of millionaires there largely through property inflation if they own their own house or have a large stake in it.
Not through your property holdings you're not.If you own your £1m house but still have £750,000 on the mortgage are you a millionaire ?
I heard a Frenchman once say “You can’t borrow wealth”.If you own your £1m house but still have £750,000 on the mortgage are you a millionaire ?
There's an exception to every rule, eg. the shareholders of Thames Water.I heard a Frenchman once say “You can’t borrow wealth”.
If you own your £1m house but still have £750,000 on the mortgage are you a millionaire ?
A bit like many pensioners at the moment thenthat get's you a quarter of the way there - depends on your other assets
I have never understood why there is a lifetime limit on what you can put in your pension..
if I can pack my pension north of 1m, why should the taxman care? In many ways a fat pension pot will allow me to stay off the state rolls
...and as Aberdonians I know might well say..."If a canna tak it wi me then am no goin'".I heard a Frenchman once say “You can’t borrow wealth”.
One has to chortle a little at that thought and how the 'common man' would contemplate such a possibilitythe lifetime limit was scrapped from the start of this tax year - now just an annual 60k limit although this can be reduced in two scenarios:
1. If your adjusted income is over 260k per year - the allowance reduces by £1 for every £2 over this to a minimum annual allowance of 10k
2. You have accessed your pension flexibly, triggering the MPAA, which reduces the 60k to 10k
