Browse Forums General Discussion Re: Type of build for Investment 10Jun 24, 2019 9:47 pm gillybean Also, for rental don’t be upgrading anything, go the minimum fittings, floor coverings, blinds etc. When the time comes to sell you can spend some money replacing all those and repainting, tenants don’t need fancy taps or stone benches in the laundry etc. Few more points to get some thoughts from you. 1) Do I need to increase ceiling height as all builders provide standard height as 4.45? Will it add any benefit for rent/resale? 2) Few builders provide package including landscaping and fencing with higher price and few exclude that? Is it worth covering that in the tender , so that mortgage takes care of that or easy to take care of our own? How much that would save? 3) Ducted vs Split A/C and Gas vs Electric cooktop ? Re: Type of build for Investment 11Jun 24, 2019 10:29 pm kumar2015 gillybean Also, for rental don’t be upgrading anything, go the minimum fittings, floor coverings, blinds etc. When the time comes to sell you can spend some money replacing all those and repainting, tenants don’t need fancy taps or stone benches in the laundry etc. Few more points to get some thoughts from you. 1) Do I need to increase ceiling height as all builders provide standard height as 4.45? Will it add any benefit for rent/resale? 2) Few builders provide package including landscaping and fencing with higher price and few exclude that? Is it worth covering that in the tender , so that mortgage takes care of that or easy to take care of our own? How much that would save? 3) Ducted vs Split A/C and Gas vs Electric cooktop ? 1. Ceiling height, maybe helpful during resale but not for a tenant. Personal I would put the money for that somewhere else. Nicer bathrooms or kitchen it will help both rental & resale. 2. Landscaping/fencing. We took out landscaping & we already had the fences up by the estate. I am a gardener & love to pot around the garden. We have been in for 9 months & we are still doing the yard. Yes we have saved some money doing it ourselves but we are so busy every time we have days off doing things we took out of our contract to do ourselves. The only thing we are kicking ourselves over is the outdoor stairs. Our builder put it in the contract for $2000 & we took it out. We have since had quotes from $10,000.00-$20,000.00 we don’t have that. We we are doing it ourselves for $7000.00 3. Ducted or split AC, is the house going to be in a good area? If you do split I would do 2 split systems. On in the kitchen/living/dining area & the other in the master bedroom. I would weigh up the cost & the area/suburb to see if it’s worth the extra for ducted. I personally love ducted we put ducted in our house but we live in Queensland & our house has fantastic views so the area is a bit of a nicer area so for us it was worth it. I also as a tenant look for properties that had ducted. But you have to way up if it is worth spending the money. Go to a couple of real estate agents that do rentals in the area & ask then what their clients are looking for in a rental. Gas/electric gas wins hands down all the time with me. I am Greek so I do a lot of cooking & when we built a built a beautiful big kitchen. I was going to put gas in until I found induction. What a amazing invention. If you can’t afford a 4 burner induction cooktop then do gas Re: Type of build for Investment 12Jun 24, 2019 10:34 pm Soph2 kumar2015 gillybean Also, for rental don’t be upgrading anything, go the minimum fittings, floor coverings, blinds etc. When the time comes to sell you can spend some money replacing all those and repainting, tenants don’t need fancy taps or stone benches in the laundry etc. Few more points to get some thoughts from you. 1) Do I need to increase ceiling height as all builders provide standard height as 4.45? Will it add any benefit for rent/resale? 2) Few builders provide package including landscaping and fencing with higher price and few exclude that? Is it worth covering that in the tender , so that mortgage takes care of that or easy to take care of our own? How much that would save? 3) Ducted vs Split A/C and Gas vs Electric cooktop ? 1. Ceiling height, maybe helpful during resale but not for a tenant. Personal I would put the money for that somewhere else. Nicer bathrooms or kitchen it will help both rental & resale. 2. Landscaping/fencing. We took out landscaping & we already had the fences up by the estate. I am a gardener & love to pot around the garden. We have been in for 9 months & we are still doing the yard. Yes we have saved some money doing it ourselves but we are so busy every time we have days off doing things we took out of our contract to do ourselves. The only thing we are kicking ourselves over is the outdoor stairs. Our builder put it in the contract for $2000 & we took it out. We have since had quotes from $10,000.00-$20,000.00 we don’t have that. We we are doing it ourselves for $7000.00 Because it’s a investment property & Unless you are a green thumb & very handy with building fences. I would get the landscaping/fencing included & then you can add to the landscape/fencing later on. 3. Ducted or split AC, is the house going to be in a good area? If you do split I would do 2 split systems. On in the kitchen/living/dining area & the other in the master bedroom. I would weigh up the cost & the area/suburb to see if it’s worth the extra for ducted. I personally love ducted we put ducted in our house but we live in Queensland & our house has fantastic views so the area is a bit of a nicer area so for us it was worth it. I also as a tenant look for properties that had ducted. But you have to way up if it is worth spending the money. Go to a couple of real estate agents that do rentals in the area & ask then what their clients are looking for in a rental. Gas/electric gas wins hands down all the time with me. I am Greek so I do a lot of cooking & when we built a built a beautiful big kitchen. I was going to put gas in until I found induction. What a amazing invention. If you can’t afford a 4 burner induction cooktop then do gas Natural stone tiles like slate, travertine, and limestone add a timeless, elegant look to… 0 24387 2 4181 Thank you so much everyone. This all makes a lot of sense. I guess when you talk to a builder who butters up everything to look very polished, you get to start believing… 7 17588 |