Sunday, December 22, 2024

6 learning fees you don’t want to pay as a property investor

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Key takeaways

Property investing may be simple, but it’s not easy. Many investors end up paying a huge “learning fee” or “Stupid Tax” because they didn’t expect to pay it.

When you buy an investment with poor capital growth because it’s in the wrong city, suburb or street, you could be paying a learning fee of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

When you realise that renovations are hard work and not as easy as reality TV shows or property blogs would suggest, you may end up paying a “renovation reality” learning fee that could cost you tens of thousands of dollars.

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While property investing may be simple, it’s not easy and that’s not a play on words, because many investors end up paying a huge “learning fee” or “Stupid Tax” as I like to call it.

A fee that they didn’t expect to pay.

That’s because choosing the right investment property comes down to much more than just knowing what you need, knowing what you can afford and knowing exactly what’s available at the time you are ready to buy.

Houses Property MarketHouses Property Market

Understandably over the last year or so with property prices rising around Australia, many novice investors thought or were often led to believe, that bricks and mortar is a safe and easy investments.

Yet many will find out the hard and often expensive way that property investment success is not so easy.

If history repeats itself, and it most certainly will, many investors entering the market will make the same classic mistakes and pay the market what I call a learning fee or a “Stupid Tax.”

So, here are 6 “learning fees” I’ve seen investors pay:

1. The “Oops, I bought the wrong property “learning fee”

You buy a home to live in but within a short time it just doesn’t “feel right”.

Or you buy an investment property and realise it’s a dud.

Did you know that statistics show that 20% of investors sell up their property in the first year and 50% in the first 5 years?

So, you decide to sell within the first year or two and regardless of what price you sell the property for, you need to remember the huge costs associated with buying and selling real estate.

There’s the stamp duty when you bought it (plus the stamp duty for the new place), legal fees when buying and selling, selling agent commissions and marketing costs and, of course, the cost of moving twice in quick succession.

This means your learning fee is likely to be tens of thousands of dollars and potentially into six figures when you take into account lost opportunity costs.

2. The “capital non-growth” learning fee

This is the fee that you pay when you buy an investment with poor capital growth because it’s in the wrong city, suburb or street.

Perhaps it grows at 2 or 3 per cent per annum when buying the right property may have achieved 6 or 7 per cent capital growth.

A three percentage point difference might not seem like a lot but over the years this could add up to a learning fee easily in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

3.   The “renovation reality” learning fee

This is the learning fee that you must pay when you realise that renovations are hard work and not as easy as reality TV shows or property blogs would suggest.

Perhaps you bought a property that needs a significant renovation in the order of 10 per cent of its purchase price.

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But then everything ended up costing more than you expected and the project ran over time, which increased your holding costs substantially.

So you ended up sinking about 20 per cent of the purchase price into the renovation and landed in the over-capitalisation territory.

This learning fee could easily cost you tens and tens of thousands of dollars as well as a waiting period of many years as you wait for the market to improve enough to get your money back.

4. The “I got eaten by a shark” learning fee

Here we have Sam and Susan, a couple of 25-year-olds who charge off to one of those investment property seminars that promise you’ll make a million dollars in six months.



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