topics
tools
editor's choice

Learning with the International Primary Curriculum

Remote training for expatriates

Should our kids go native too?

Pre-school activities in Belgium

How expats are learning the local lingo

Expatica countries
Index Last Var.(%)
BEL 20 2089.49 -2.47
DAX 6285.75 -2.33
IBEX 30 6440.5 -3.31
CAC 40 3003.27 -2.62
FTSE 100 5266.41 -2.53
AEX 289.16 -2.29
DJIA 12496.15 -0.05
Nasdaq 2850.12 0.39
FTSE MIB 12960.87 -3.68
TSX Composite 11564.8 0.99
ASX 4118.8 -1.31
Hang seng 18786.19 -1.33
Straits Times 2780.42 -1.53
ISEQ 20 490.11 -1.66
You are here: Home Housing Renting Should I buy or rent?
Enlarge font Decrease font Text size


01/06/2007Should I buy or rent?

Should I buy or rent? Finding a place to live is the first need for any expat arriving in a new country, and for those with the means that raises the first major economic issue.

A question that occurs to the shrewd expat when moving to a host country for a term of maybe three, perhaps four years or more is: 'Should I rent or should I buy?'

The answer depends obviously on the expectations of price rises in the market.

Had you gone to Dublin eight years ago and bought a well-located city property, you would be walking away now with enough profit to more than keep you in Guinness.

Berlin holds out some tantalising signs of hope for those who like to play on the great roulette wheel of real estate.

Prices have risen, in some areas sharply, particularly in the old East where a flood tide of gentrification has swept in.

At the same time the new capital is lagging well behind other German cities in property prices, holding out the prospect of more rises to come.

So rent or buy, where does the balance lie in Berlin today?

Gerald Beuker, of the Berlin real estate firm, Angerman, expresses the optimism about property prices that is a professional requirement for someone in his line of work.

"There is a saying that Berlin will be filled from the middle - and in the centre of Berlin there is good demand. "In the top locations you can get 4-6,000 euros per square metre," he says.

But on the market overall, Herr Beuker is more cautious.

"It's not really a boom market. The market is OK, but it's not rising, rising - and of course we have a very low level of price."

Mr Beuker says you can expect to pay about 1,500 euros per square metre for accommodation in the middle range of the Berlin market. That, he says is one or two thousand less that you could expect for the equivalent level in cities like Hamburg and Munich.

As a man who deals in both the rental and sales markets Mr Beuker can take a disinterested view of the pros and cons of both.

So rent or buy? "For three or four years I will say rent, because buying there is the risk later that at the end of your term you will not get the price you need.

"Maybe if you buy at the top in Gruunewald or Dahlem, you maybe will have a chance to see the price rise enough," Mr Beuker says.

But he adds another warning that the continuing shakeout of German property holdings since reunification will see more properties formerly held by the State coming into private hands, putting more units and houses on the market and more downward pressure on prices.

In all the advice is that, unless you are here for the very long term, renting is the best bet.





0 reactions to this article

0 reactions to this article

Search for a home?

Browse all houses
find the business you need
Discussion Forums

Community Noticeboard Belgium

Holiday appartment for rent @Côte d´Azur (French Riviera)

American in Belgium

BUY NOVELTY DRIVING LICENSE,ID CARD, PASSPORT

Discuss Belgian Culture

BUY NOVELTY DRIVING LICENSE,ID CARD, PASSPORT

Belgian News

BUY NOVELTY DRIVING LICENSE,ID CARD, PASSPORT

Community Noticeboard Belgium

BUY NOVELTY DRIVING LICENSE,ID CARD, PASSPORT

participate in the forums

Inside Expatica
Looking for work in Belgium

Looking for work in Belgium

This handy guide from Expertise in Labour Mobility includes how to write a CV, application procedure, interview dos and don'ts, Belgian management culture.

Practical, easy-to-use, free and... in English

Practical, easy-to-use, free and... in English

Belgium’s first alternative directory assistance services - available through the shortcode 14-14 - can now be accessed on the internet.

Finding a rental home in Belgium

Finding a rental home in Belgium

Moving to Belgium presents a host of challenges to expats, not least of all finding the right home.

Learning to cope with life abroad

Learning to cope with life abroad

The psychological effects of global mobility can be physically painful.