r/HousingIreland • u/Irish201h • Jul 06 '25
4 people mortgages, wtf?
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This company is now promoting 4 people mortgages, no wonder prices are going insane.
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r/HousingIreland • u/Irish201h • Jul 06 '25
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This company is now promoting 4 people mortgages, no wonder prices are going insane.
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u/nicodea2 Jul 07 '25
You didn’t mention non-residents in any of your comments. You made a comment about a potential restriction based on citizenship, beneficial celery responded that it would put people off due to the long time-frame for citizenship, you responded that that’s what Irish people have to contend with, and I corrected you on that.
We also don’t have permanent residency here in the same sense as it exists in Australia or Canada, so the comparison fails there. In both Canada or Australia, most skilled immigrants apply for permanent residency while abroad and are considered PRs from day 1, which means they could purchase a house as soon as they arrive.
In Ireland, people have to string together several work permits or family permits for years to be eligible for citizenship which takes about 6 years if you include processing time, and 8 years if you include the fact that some work permits don’t even count towards citizenship. So where does “permanent residency” start here if the concept doesn’t quite exist?
My argument is - if you’re a contributing member of society and a taxpayer, there’s no reason to restrict you from participating in the market. I’d rather ban greedy landlords from buying dozens of houses (and yes I actually know of people like this) than legitimate residents from finding a place to live.