Owning your Ghanaian Dream: Turning Rent into Wealth - Part 2 There are several reasons why owning a home in Ghana is a smart move. Some of these include : 1. #Stability and Putting Down Roots: Your Safe Haven: No more worrying about #rent increases or getting kicked out! Owning a home gives you peace of mind, knowing you have a permanent place to call #home, especially if you have a #family. 2. Building a Community: #Homeowners tend to stick around and care more about their neighborhood. This creates a stronger sense of #community, with friendly faces and people who look out for each other. 3. Pride of Place: There’s nothing quite like owning your own home. It shows your #hardwork and makes you feel good! You can paint the walls your favorite color, plant a garden, and make it truly yours. 4. Making Your Space Your Own. Your Castle, Your Rules: Want a bigger kitchen? A funky bathroom? As a #homeowner, you can customize your space to fit your style and needs. It’s your chance to create a dream home that reflects you!
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Our report found that just 7% of people in the city centre own their own home, with rentals accounting for almost 60%. The vast majority of households in the city centre (73%) are made up of a smaller number of people, with larger households locating in the suburbs. This has serious policy implications on how Ireland increases home ownership and attracts larger households to live in the city centre. To see our recommendations read our report here: https://lnkd.in/ezGZjWm8 #limerick #limerickcitycentre #housing Seán Golden | Dee Ryan | miriam o'connor
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Finding the perfect apartment based on personal preferences is a wild game, especially in Lagos. Working professionals hop on finding new apartments for different reasons, including; proximity to place of work. better comfort and many times landlord & neighbors trouble amongst several other possible reasons The challenge however is the craze that often accompanies this mission like unprofessional agents, housing prices hike and so on. Today, we want to hear YOUR own story and experience with #LagosRenting. Share the good, the bad and the hilarious 😅👇 #Stories #lagosrealestate #RentStories
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🏚 The tiny house movement is booming in New Zealand, and for good reason 🏚 It offers exciting possibilities for sustainable living, affordability, or even generating income. But before diving in, understanding the legal aspects, particularly resource consent requirements from your local council, is essential. Our new blog looks at things like: 1. What if my tiny home is on wheels? Is it a vehicle or a building - or both? 2. The Auckland Unitary Plan and tiny homes 3. Seeking clarification 4. What info you need to gather 5. A link to the Tiny House Guide created by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment https://lnkd.in/gR8HauRS #tinyhome #tinyhouse #resourceconsent #realestate #nzhomes #aucklandunitaryplan #housingdevelopment #buildingconsent #council #aucklandcouncil #nzproperty #residential
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At least most typical Nigerian homes, have had their own share of battles with the six-legged intruders who try to rule their homes for them - Cockroaches. From kitchens, to stores, to even rooms and closed spaces you'd almost find one or more of this uninvited guest dominating, with their signature habit of spoiling things and leaving an offensive smell in the atmosphere. In the end, amidst the trials and tribulations that cockroaches bring to Nigerian homes, Habeep, a social real estate platform is here to help you get access to clean homes, affordable housing options, connect you with reliable agents, help you pay your rent on time, and also give you knowledge on effective housing tips through our social platforms. To get more information, click on the link on our bio. #habeep_re #socialrealestate #habeep #houseagent
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Tenants Like You Could Be Owed Up To £10,000* If Your Home Is In Disrepair! If you live in a council property or a social housing/housing association property, it is your landlord who is required to ensure that your home is fit for human habitation and in proper working order. As a tenant paying rent, you would expect that as a bare minimum, but too many people are living in homes that don’t meet basic standards, as has been highlighted in the media. By law, your landlord is legally obliged to act on certain types of issues affecting the property they rent and so If you have notified them of a defect (either by phone, email or in person) and they failed to fix the problem. You may well have a claim for compensation due to your Housing Disrepair. Call us FREE today on 0800 887 0700 or email us on [email protected] #HousingDisrepair #Just4Tenants #UKHousing #UKRenting #RentingInUK #TenantUK #HousingUK #UKProperty #TenantRightsUK #UKTenants #UKRenters #UKRentalMarket #HousingCrisisUK #UKHousingIssues #UKPropertyMarket #UKLandlords #UKRentalLaw #HousingStandardsUK #UKResidential #UKTenancy #RentingRightsUK #UKHousingAct
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According to the American Community Survey, Hawai‘i had the highest median rent in the U.S. at $1,868 in 2022. UHERO's 2023 data shows the median asking rent now at $2,000, with Maui's highest at $2,400. Post-Maui fires, rental availability has dropped and prices soared. High rent areas include Princeville, Hawai‘i Kai, and ‘Ewa Gentry, all exceeding $3,000. Meanwhile, the east side of Hawai‘i Island offers the cheapest rents, from $1,350 to $1,450. It's time to cut regulations to build more housing! #HawaiiHousingCrisis
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Production Engineer | Real Estate Consultant| Helping Individuals satisfy their Real Estate investment & cashflow needs.| Former Operations Safety Intern at TotalEnergies.
IF YOU LIVE OVERSEAS AND BUILDING IN NIGERIA, YOU NEED TO READ THIS.-Part1 Living Abroad and Building for Caretakers to Enjoy, The Wisdom of the African I recently argued that many caretakers looking after the properties of those living abroad are the true owners or beneficiaries of these properties. Usually, an African will erect a beautiful house back home while living abroad and then another person called a caretaker will be employed to live in the house, enjoy the house and watch over the house every day. The legal/actual owner visits once a year for about 2-3 weeks to enjoy the property. The caretaker enjoys it every day. Interestingly, the caretakers enjoy the property right from completion, when everything is fresh and beautiful. The legal owner may finally return home 10 or 15 years later, if lucky, to enjoy the remnant of the property; when style, taste, and beauty have all diminished. Why? Because we are told this is what we ought to do. Build back home when you are never there, spend your money on things far away from you, for others to enjoy. Even if I was not a minimalist, I couldn’t also see any good reason why a person with a family size of 3 or 4, wife and a child or two children, would build a 9-bedroom house in Africa; leaving about 6 rooms empty all the time to be occupied probably by the ghosts of their ancestors. Obviously a wastage in having a 9-bedroom family house, that the rooms are never used by the family, and the cost of maintenance is always a financial drain or another waste of resources. You wouldn’t go and buy 10 doughnuts in the morning and just eat 3 and throw away the 7, simply because you can afford them. So why do the same with buildings? I know someone who is building a 12-bedroom house in his village as his personal residence and this has taken 9 years so far, he is still on it. In the meantime, he is renting a small room in the US and he says he will one day leave to go back home to live in his mansion. He may die in US. Currently the design of this mansion is even outdated, and he has at least 5 years more to complete based on the pace. In 2018, a certain young man, 43 years, died in the USA from a heart attack while asleep. It was 3 days after his death that he was found. He too was living in a small room, working 16 hours a day for 6 days and putting all his monies into building a 9-bedroom house back home on a piece of land he bought. When he died, his family/wife sold the house. It was too big for them to even maintain if it was completed. This was not also completed. A lot of Africans abroad (especially people from mother's village) indeed build houses back home to create a certain impression of themselves or just to show off, and while doing so, they forget to live in the moment thinking they will one day, when on pension or old, go and enjoy these houses.
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Your No.1 Real Estate Plug In Ghana, get featured in our upcoming 3rd Edition. For more details, contact us on our socials or at [email protected]. #hignews #newsfeed #housingtrends #realestatenews #HousingInGhanaTour #BuildingCommunities #discoverghana #HousingMarket #housingmarketupdates #trending #trendingpost #hig #housinginghanatour #news #housing #guides #hignewsupdate #magazine #HousingForAll #higpodcast #RealEstateGoals #realestatetips #home #realestatelife #leadingtheway #realestate #housinginghana #higtours #housinginghanamagazine #housingmarketupdate
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It is increasingly becoming clear to us that many tenants in Kenya do not know their rights. To many, the landlord reigns supreme and has a right to do anything with their property....especially when it comes to rent increments. This is not true as you are protected by the law in many ways. Below are seven things to know about rent increments as a tenant: 1. A landlord should not increase your rent without notice unless stated in the tenancy agreement. 2. You must receive a formal letter stating when the property owner will increase the rent. 3. The letter or written notice must give you at least one month to inform you of the coming changes. 4. A landlord may or may not give a reason for increasing the rent. 5. The law gives you (the tenant) the right to object to the increment. 6. If you choose to object, you must notify your landlord within 30 days of getting the notice. 7. The Urban Tenants Association is one legal body you can use to lodge your objections on the increments. Have you ever had a problem with your landlord over rent increments? Let us know your experience... #tenancyagreements #realestate #leaseskenya
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BBC News has described the Church Commissioners' and @English Rural Housing Association scheme in Shepherdswell, Kent, as 'a blueprint for the future' of affordable housing in rural communities across England: https://lnkd.in/eqFMGctv The mix of apartments and two and three-bedroom houses will permanently remain as affordable housing and will only be available to those with ties to Shepherdswell, ensuring that local people have secure, safe places to live in their own community. Schemes like these are essential for tackling a desperate shortage in rural affordable housing, with waiting lists growing ten times faster than in urban areas, according to the @National Housing Federation. We continue to work with communities, local authorities and housing associations to identify opportunities to deliver much-needed, high-quality affordable housing in rural locations.
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