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appinlad

United Kingdom
41 Posts
Joined: 18 Apr 2006
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Posted - 06 Apr 2009 :  12:20:03 Show Profile Send appinlad a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
My wife and I are thinking of spending 3 months of the year (probably winter) out in Florida. Is it better to rent a Condo/villa as opposed to buying in the current climate? Also is it possible to get car hire for that length of time? Thanks in advance.

John & Joyce

blott

United Kingdom
23840 Posts
Joined: 22 Feb 2002
Status: online

Posted - 06 Apr 2009 :  12:36:31 Show Profile Reply with Quote
You'd have to stay a lot of three months worths to break even on a purchase, not only for the purchase price. There are utility bills to pay whether the home is occupied or not (although less obviously) so you'd be paying them for 9 months when you weren't there, not to mention property taxes, insurance, etc, etc.

If you're thinking you could rent it out yourself for nine months a year, be prepared for a lot of hard work, bearing in mind that most of the best advertising sites are currently closed to new joiners. There are also constant upgrades/improvements/repairs/replacements to be taken care of, not to mention customer service which means never being away from the PC for more than five minutes at a time!

Yes, you can get car rental but the max is 56 days on one voucher so you would have a voucher for 56 days and then another one for the remaining amount of time.

blott
www.orlandovillas.com/villas/150.aspx

Katys Grandad

United Kingdom
2272 Posts
Joined: 11 Oct 2004
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Posted - 06 Apr 2009 :  12:41:06 Show Profile Send Katys Grandad a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
Some many individual factors to take into account. I can't see any advantage whatsoever in buying a property and incurring the related costs if you're just going to be in it for 3 months a year. However, you might have plans for the other 9 months which change that. I really think you'd need to give more information for anybody to give you useful advice.

I'm sure you can rent a car for long periods but I'm not aware of any significant discounts from regular rates by doing that. To be honest, the real question might be whether it's worth buying a car!!

Frosty

United Kingdom
927 Posts
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Posted - 06 Apr 2009 :  14:16:36 Show Profile Send Frosty a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
If you have spare money then yes buying maybe an option right now, the market is depressed, but there is signs it maybe starting to pick up.
As already said, there are lots of other costs involved in keeping the house for the other 9 months.
Management fee's, utilities, insurance etc.
If you bought a house with a pool, you have to keep the pool pump running or the water goes green.
You have to keep the AC running or the house gets mold.

Having said all that if you bought now and the price goes up over the next 2 years, then it would be looked at as a solid investment. The thing is no one knows whats around the corner.

AS for a car, i wouldn't buy, the insurance rates out here are crazy, it wouldn't work out doing it that way. Long term renting would be the option.

Neil & Kay

chrizzy100

USA
7559 Posts
Joined: 26 May 2003
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Posted - 06 Apr 2009 :  14:33:38 Show Profile Send chrizzy100 a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
It costs me about $9k a year to keep a second home in FL without a pool..which even being in FL about 4/5 months of the year we never would have time to use..a friend of our is buying up homes in the Orlando area and is finding the prices going up...that is in the last 3 weeks..he has lost the last few in biding wars..

steph_goodrum

United Kingdom
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Posted - 06 Apr 2009 :  16:07:50 Show Profile Send steph_goodrum a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
If youu don't want the hassle of letting it out when you aren't there then I would say definitely rent. That way you aren't tied to the same place each trip but if you find a house and area you really love then as long as you book early enough you can probably get the same place most years.

There are so many places to explore and you will have your pick (and cheaper than buying), without spending your trips doing maintenance.

Babblin Boo
http://www.orlandovillas.com/villas/92.aspx

wrpac00

United Kingdom
3656 Posts
Joined: 21 Sep 2003
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Posted - 08 Apr 2009 :  11:53:43 Show Profile Send wrpac00 a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
We bought a munfactured home 7 years ago with the sole reason being spending at least 3 months a year in it which we have been able to do since last year. I try to rent it out for the months we are not there to help with the running costs but pottering around doing bits in the house are all part of the vacation.

As far as buying a car is concerned it is touch and go. Its costing me almost $2500 this summer for 91 days, insurance is not that expensive but you do have all the upkeep so its hard to decide on whether it costs in or not.

Paul

http://www.villasflorida.com/florida-vacation-rental-873.aspx

Frosty

United Kingdom
927 Posts
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Posted - 08 Apr 2009 :  14:52:48 Show Profile Send Frosty a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by wrpac00
We bought a munfactured home 7 years ago with the sole reason being spending at least 3 months a year in it which we have been able to do since last year. I try to rent it out for the months we are not there to help with the running costs but pottering around doing bits in the house are all part of the vacation.

As far as buying a car is concerned it is touch and go. Its costing me almost $2500 this summer for 91 days, insurance is not that expensive but you do have all the upkeep so its hard to decide on whether it costs in or not.



Out of interest, what do you class as not expensive for car insurance?

Neil & Kay

roger

USA
4703 Posts
Joined: 21 Jan 2002
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Posted - 08 Apr 2009 :  15:04:40 Show Profile Reply with Quote
Our car insurance is around $950 per 6 months. That allows any driver and covers both our cars (that were brand new when purchased 2 years ago but age of car doesn't seem to make too much difference from what I can tell).

If I recall correctly the insurance for 1 car was around $650 per 6 months so adding the second car didn't double it. That's the best policy we could get. You can get lesser coverage but not worth the risk.



quote:
Originally posted by Frosty
quote:
Originally posted by wrpac00
We bought a munfactured home 7 years ago with the sole reason being spending at least 3 months a year in it which we have been able to do since last year. I try to rent it out for the months we are not there to help with the running costs but pottering around doing bits in the house are all part of the vacation.

As far as buying a car is concerned it is touch and go. Its costing me almost $2500 this summer for 91 days, insurance is not that expensive but you do have all the upkeep so its hard to decide on whether it costs in or not.



Out of interest, what do you class as not expensive for car insurance?


Roger & Carolyn
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Frosty

United Kingdom
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Posted - 08 Apr 2009 :  16:13:17 Show Profile Send Frosty a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by roger
Our car insurance is around $950 per 6 months. That allows any driver and covers both our cars (that were brand new when purchased 2 years ago but age of car doesn't seem to make too much difference from what I can tell).

If I recall correctly the insurance for 1 car was around $650 per 6 months so adding the second car didn't double it. That's the best policy we could get. You can get lesser coverage but not worth the risk.



quote:
Originally posted by Frosty
quote:
Originally posted by wrpac00
We bought a munfactured home 7 years ago with the sole reason being spending at least 3 months a year in it which we have been able to do since last year. I try to rent it out for the months we are not there to help with the running costs but pottering around doing bits in the house are all part of the vacation.

As far as buying a car is concerned it is touch and go. Its costing me almost $2500 this summer for 91 days, insurance is not that expensive but you do have all the upkeep so its hard to decide on whether it costs in or not.



Out of interest, what do you class as not expensive for car insurance?





Yes thats more or less what we have.
I think thats expensive, especially if you wanted to have a car doormant in the garage for most of the year.
So as per my original quote, i think the OP would be better of renting than buying.

I was asking wrpac00 what he considered "not that expensive" as per his advice.

Neil & Kay

steph_goodrum

United Kingdom
8327 Posts
Joined: 12 Feb 2002
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Posted - 08 Apr 2009 :  17:15:25 Show Profile Send steph_goodrum a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
I think if you are going out of town you can reduce insurance from what I've read and then reinstate it when you come back.

Babblin Boo
http://www.orlandovillas.com/villas/92.aspx

Sniff

Germany
674 Posts
Joined: 03 May 2006
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Posted - 08 Apr 2009 :  18:05:28 Show Profile Send Sniff a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by steph_goodrum
I think if you are going out of town you can reduce insurance from what I've read and then reinstate it when you come back.


Here in Germany quite a few people have a second, fun car (like a convertible, or an oldtimer as they are called here) that they only want to drive in the summer. The insurance companies are quite flexible on this and you can get insurance that is fully comprehensive from April-Oct (for example) and then it drops to just Fire & Theft. Of course you can't drive it on the roads Nov-Mar but it's covered in case it gets damaged.

I bet there is something similar you can get in the USA

Keith

wrpac00

United Kingdom
3656 Posts
Joined: 21 Sep 2003
Status: offline

Posted - 08 Apr 2009 :  18:54:27 Show Profile Send wrpac00 a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Frosty
quote:
Originally posted by roger
Our car insurance is around $950 per 6 months. That allows any driver and covers both our cars (that were brand new when purchased 2 years ago but age of car doesn't seem to make too much difference from what I can tell).

If I recall correctly the insurance for 1 car was around $650 per 6 months so adding the second car didn't double it. That's the best policy we could get. You can get lesser coverage but not worth the risk.
quote:
Originally posted by Frosty
quote:
Originally posted by wrpac00
We bought a munfactured home 7 years ago with the sole reason being spending at least 3 months a year in it which we have been able to do since last year. I try to rent it out for the months we are not there to help with the running costs but pottering around doing bits in the house are all part of the vacation.

As far as buying a car is concerned it is touch and go. Its costing me almost $2500 this summer for 91 days, insurance is not that expensive but you do have all the upkeep so its hard to decide on whether it costs in or not.
Out of interest, what do you class as not expensive for car insurance?

Yes thats more or less what we have.
I think thats expensive, especially if you wanted to have a car doormant in the garage for most of the year.
So as per my original quote, i think the OP would be better of renting than buying.

I was asking wrpac00 what he considered "not that expensive" as per his advice.
About what Roger quoted.

Paul

http://www.villasflorida.com/florida-vacation-rental-873.aspx

SDJ

United Kingdom
2577 Posts
Joined: 16 Nov 2005
Status: offline

Posted - 08 Apr 2009 :  22:17:31 Show Profile Send SDJ a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
You can put your car on 'vacation leave' when you are not in Florida. The reason the insurance starts high is they don't take any 'no claims' you have in UK so you start at the high level and it gradually decreases. It took us 3 or 4 years - can't quite remember to get down to the reasonable rates.

http://www.orlandovillas.com/florida-vacation-rental-3181.aspx

ellie

United Kingdom
7346 Posts
Joined: 31 May 2004
Status: offline

Posted - 09 Apr 2009 :  10:56:17 Show Profile Send ellie a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
If you need to rent out your home in order to pay for it then having a car in the garage for 9 months of the year could be a distinct disadvantage. What do you do about it when you have guests in your house? So it might be easier to hire one.

Ellie

www.orlandovillas.com/villas/576.aspx

appinlad

United Kingdom
41 Posts
Joined: 18 Apr 2006
Status: offline

Posted - 09 Apr 2009 :  17:50:58 Show Profile Send appinlad a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
Hey thanks guys for the advice.

John & Joyce

Andrena

United Kingdom
1338 Posts
Joined: 14 Oct 2004
Status: offline

Posted - 22 Jul 2009 :  14:37:03 Show Profile Send Andrena a Direct Message  Reply with Quote
when you are not using your car you just keep the minimum legal required insurance, ours costs us $14.72 per month and then you just up it to fully comprehensive when you plan to use it. We find it very economical much cheaper than renting for periods of more than a month at a time.

Andrena

www.orlandovillas.com/florida-vacation-rental-1398.aspx
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