by Workingman » 24 Oct 2017, 15:36
I find this idea of affordable housing a bit (a lot) of a mystery.
The average UK gross wage is ~£26,000 or around £50,000 for a couple: £36,700 net.
Official figures show that such a couple would spend £1.145 per month on living costs. This figure is for everything bar mortgage/rent, council tax and holidays. A cheap holiday to Costa del Hangover could easily run to £1000, or £85 per month. Rent, ex London, averages at £900 per month. That leaves £928 per month for all other expenses or eventualities inc savings.
If that couple was to take out a sensible mortgage i.e. one able to be paid and also cover emergencies such as interest rate rises and periods illness or redundancy, at least for a short time, then they would probably get one for about £150,000. That is roughtly 6x their individual average salary and at curernt rates the mortgage repayments would be similar to their rent. That is what we used to do.
The thing there is what sort of property could be built for £150,000 and give the builder a profit?
If we go look at couples below the average salary then "affordable" becomes even less affordable.
A couple with one on £10ph and one on the living wage would have a joint gross income of about £33,250: £24,000 net. They are already wiped out with rent and living costs. A sensible mortgage for them would not get a garden shed, a risky one with no leeway for anything of, say £72,000, doesn't improve things.