Sunday, 13 December 2015

Self Build House Costs

Self Build House Costs


This post will try to share some of my headaches around the price to build a house in Ireland in 2016! There is always the two key elements of "Can I?" vs "Should I?" at play. Just because you can afford to build at the very outside of your budget, doesn't mean you should! Do I go for a 20% deposit to get a better interest rate and leave myself cash short during build?

I've been busy contacting various institutions to get an idea of costs to work out a monthly budget. I've used this to track back the mortgage I'm comfortable paying (while hopefully not resorting to baked beans 7 days a week!) and inform the overall building budget. This then informs the size of the house to build based on square meters (which as I've learnt is the internal floor area of a building that includes partition walls, doors etc).

At least that's how I've worked out a comfortable balance between size, cost to build, cost of mortgage that I'll be left with once the dust and concrete has settled!

All I used was Excel and just started adding workbooks that tackle different areas:

Requirements

  • Must Have
  • Nice to Have
  • Risks / Unknowns / Area to enquire about
These represent the Project Brief you supply to the builder/architect. And it keeps you honest, put a cost against as many as you can in the nice to have column.

Annual Budget (Current)

  • Cost of roof over my head (rent and bills)
  • Car running costs (I track my fuel costs for work)
  • Personal expenses from insurances to mobile phone top ups
  • Misc (Charitable Donations etc)
  • Savings
This shows you what you've been paying historically, see how much cash you HAD but blew?!!

Monthly Budget (Projected)

  • Mortgage
  • Pension AVCs
  • Utility Bills
  • Home Insurance
  • Bins
  • Irish Water
  • Car
  • Mobile
  • Property Tax
  • Life Insurance for Mortgage
This is the meat and the first look at how much you will be left to live on after all the bills are paid. Calculate all your annual bills and divide by 12. You have to keep this money available each month.

Regarding Payslips: Remember that if you get Health Insurance through your Employer it's not free. Benefit in Kind is applied so while it's cheaper you are paying for it yourself. Good to know if you change employer! I strongly recommend you scrutinize your Payslip to fully understand what every line item is. Things change, if you get mileage it may not be constant, a car allowance can be taken away. Use your base salary and work out if you can afford to pay the mortgage with it. If not you're at risk....

Work out if you're missing any tax credits and start saving all medical receipts for sending either to your Health Provider or Revenue (you can't do both!). Streamline your charges, change banks if that is necessary. Use websites that are geared to saving you money by comparing banks, atm charges, energy costs etc for instance:

http://www.moneyguideireland.com

Then when you have all that done go back again and see what you missed! You're taking a plunge both short term and longer term. Make sure you know what every charge is on your bank / credit card statement. Do I REALLY need that?

Now you're ready to work out the build costs. You'll get various quotes for €X per square meter. You need to add to that all the extra charges to get a total cost.


  • Size of House (Sq. Meters) 
  • Cost per Sq Meter €
  • Build Cost (=Size x Cost)
  • 10% Contingency (Add 10% and add VAT of 13.5%)
  • Architect Fees 11% (Add VAT of 23%)
  • Quantity Surveyor 3% (Add VAT of 23%)
  • Structural Engineer
  • Site Cost (Get solicitors letter agreeing site layout & cost subject to planning permission before purchasing)
  • Stamp Duty (1% on Site Cost plus House build cost)
  • Legal Costs
  • Site Survey
  • Self Build Insurance (Public Liability but check if your approach needs more than this)

  • County Council Contribution
  • Irish Water Connection Charge
  • ESB Connection Charge
  • Bord Gais Connection Charge
  • Virgin Media Charge

  • Rainwater Harvesting
  • Home Automation
  • Appliances 
  • Furniture

  • Total Build Cost:
So now you have a list of items you need to go out and get the price for. You should then be able to work out the cost. I copied the costs across the page into one of four Stages so I can see when I need to have each sum of money ready to payout (The costs outlined above are listed in one category or broken up over several):

  • Stage 1 - Initial Design
  • Stage 2 - Developed Design
  • Stage 3 - Detail Design
  • Stage 4 - Construction
  • Stage 5 - Post Construction

The Mortgage Provider should be quized as to how they release funds. You need to know how much of a Deposit you can afford without leaving you cash strapped during the build phase. Different Architects may have different approaches so you need to know when you'll have an accurate picture of costs. Ideally before you go to planning. That alone will drain a lot of your deposit and the bank will only let you start drawdown once you get approval. The bank I talked to will allow me to include the Professional Fees such as Architect & Quantity Surveyor as part of the mortgage even though they are being paid a good chunk beforehand. However I still need to present an intact deposit to them to get that lovely 20% interest rate, have a think about that and see how you go?! 

So, Excel is your friend! You can find online Mortgage Calculators to help you plan what the mortgage repayments are likely to be. Stress it yourself to 6-8% and see what happens. You'll need 6 months of savings records going to the bank to help you prove you can afford it.Play with different mortgage terms. 


Now pick 2 from the Triangle below:

Feeling dizzy yet?!! For sure building is not cheap. You can end up with a house that costs more to build than it's worth to sell! But only you can determine the value of it once you're living there. Smaller is better but not necessarily cheaper. There are definitely economies of scale to be had which I'm going to miss out on due to the size of the site and my overall budget. 

One Tip: Measure out the rooms in your house and get a feel for what space you like / when it starts to get to be a squeeze. Measure them & calculate the total square meter area. Add up the number of rooms and sizes you want and see if you put it into your Excel sheet above, can you afford it? (Allow a bit for partition walls, doors, hotpress etc) Then work upwards +Sq Meters & downwards -Sq Meters - you can copy a worksheet or just play with the size to get your ideal. Now you're ready to talk to an Architect and state what you want and what you can afford. 

The exercise is gruelling a little but it gives you crystal clear understanding of your financial situation and exposure. The last thing you or the bank wants is to hand back the keys after a year.....plan well, ask the right questions, listen to the advice, some of it will be hard but be realistic and always, always sleep well at night, a mortgage and new house isn't going to make your life any easier but it can be an accomplishment in your life and something to be proud of when it's all finished. 







Tuesday, 8 December 2015

Water Quality

Water Quality


I'm an avid user of Volvic bottled water and have been for years after discovering I'm sensitive to calcium. Other brands have higher concentrations and I break out in eczema when I drink to much dairy / calcium or after drinking gallons of milk which I was able to in my younger years!

I wanted to move away from the supermarket trip and start using the new metal water containers I bought but I need a clean water source. There are lots of options but a good starting place is to get your water tested. Yes, it's drinking water but can you trust it? I guess the reason a lot of people buy bottled or filter is that they don't! Fluoride, Chlorine, aluminium, lead, and the list goes on!

I found a local lab that does testing. I also looked up the county council who conduct their own tests to see what info was there. They tell you their findings but not in the detail I would like. Do you live in a hard or soft water area? With the pressure on Dublin water did you know the water you assumed was soft is being mixed with hard water due to demand?

Hard water contains a significant amount of minerals such as calcium and magnesium. It reacts with soap to create a film and not suds. It leaves a scale deposit and doesn't form a lather with detergents. This damages appliances over time and many people down the country prefer to treat their water as it enters the building as a result.

I never considered that I might be getting Hard Water in Dublin but as they are proposing pumping water from the Shannon now we're more likely going to see hard water appearing. Currently where I live it's mixed 3 parts soft to 1 hard but this is subject to Irish Water of course!

Of course you can always reduce your demand, use low flow taps and shower heads, install a Rainwater Harvesting system which is naturally soft but you still need mains for drinking, cooking, washing (dishes) and showering. The Rainwater is good for clothes washing and flushing the toilets.

There are a lot more elements to water and the EU has a standard it sets out S.I. 439. It can be tested against and there are two standard tests available. One is simpler and is carried out monthly by the councils at various locations. The more stringent test is done yearly. They publish the results but only the summary, rather than all the data.

The Tests are laid out here:
http://www.publicanalystdublin.ie/en/EnvironmentalHealthService/WaterAnalyticalServices/

The Check Monitoring is for drinking water and would be equivalent to that monthly check mentioned earlier. The Audit Monitoring is probably the yearly check.

Check Monitoring:


Audit Monitoring:

The are a number of labs around Dublin & Ireland that offer tests ranging from €50-€200+ depending on options. They post you out a test kit. You fill up the bottles according to instructions provided and get them back to the Lab within 6 hours. Pick a nearby site! there are postal options and self test kits also.



My own test kit arrived recently and I've dropped it back to awaiting the results - typically emailed to you within 10 working days or so. Once I have the results I can determine what, if any, filtering would be best for my new build house. A filter at point of entry, a brita jug or something else. It helps because you need to know what you intend to filter. Is it just for taste or is there something more sinister around? There should be no lead in the pipes I'm currently using as it's a new housing estate, they are typically plastic but I've added that test and Calcium also just for kicks!

The Councils have pages where you can review water quality test results for your area:
http://www.dlrcoco.ie/aboutus/councildepartments/wateranddrainage/findit/drinkingwaterqualityresults/
http://www.sdcc.ie/services/environmental-health/water-services/drinking-water
http://www.fingalcoco.ie/water-and-drainage/water-quality/water-quality-reports/
http://kildare.ie/CountyCouncil/waterservices/watersupply/waterquality/

The water testing laboratories will inform you immediately if they see any bacteria etc but if other tests are around the EU limits they will just send on the whole lot to you when they are ready.

A sample from the Dublin City Council water testing 2015 is shown below:

This gives you an idea what problems there may be in your area. Coolock was subject to a boil notice 3 years ago so Dublin isn't as safe as you might assume so it's worth once a year checking the reports for your area and ringing the Council if you have any concerns.

I take fresh clean water for granted. Think it's easy as turning a tap - I bet there's a whole TV Programme around how they manage the water supply. Unfortunately with Irish Water on the game there's a lot of flux around who controls what so you may end up running between them and the councils but it should sort itself out in the next few years (hopefully!).

I looked into the cost of a Hot Tub once and saw the effort it takes to regulate the water, a relatively small amount (maybe that's the problem, low volume compared to reservoirs). There were chemicals for everything and lots of PH strips and other test kits required. So - hats off to the Council for keeping an ageing water system in play!

I'll post the results when I get them to give you an idea of what comes back. Some Labs that offer testing are as follows (in no particular order):
http://www.watertesting.ie
http://www.cityanalysts.ie
http://www.alswatertesting.ie
https://irishwatertesting.com

There are kits you can post back or do yourself, google away - I prefer a Lab as I wanted a Professional to have a look mine and avoid installing a whole house water filtration system when I sneezed into the test kit - that wouldn't be good!!

Happy Gurgling on a glass of the good clear stuff!

Update 18/01/16

I got the water test results:

They send you  a doc with a list of normal value ranges for comparison:

pH: Should be between 6.5 and 9.5
Nitrates: Below 10mg/l
Conductivity: Less than 2500 uS/cm @ 20 degrees C
Iron: Less than 0.20 mg/l
Total Coliforms: limit of 0 cfu/100ml
E-Coli: limit of 0 cfu/100ml
Total Hardness: No Limit Applies
Apparent Colour: "Limit=Acceptable to customers and no abnormal change"
Flouride: Less than 0.8mg/lF in flouridated Supplies
Turbidity: Recommended value under 1 NTU

Extra Tests I Ordered:
Calcium: Not sure but the value I got I compare to bottled water where I know what levels affect me personally.
Lead: under 10 ug per litre

So, all good more or less. Good to know the Council is keeping a good watch on things.....