Iceland ad star flees to Tenerife

Kerry Katona enjoys a break in Tenerife with her children

Kerry Katona enjoys a break in Tenerife with her children

Whilst most of us come to  Tenerife and the Canary Islands for holidays in the sun or to buy or rent our dream home, others see it as a refuge when under extreme pressure. The face of Iceland foods Kerry Katona was seen crumpled on the pavement with her head in her hands,  looking  distraught as she was  comforted by husband Mark Croft.

Earlier, the pair were spotted walking through town with their arms  around each other. Her very public meltdown took place on a pavement in Tenerife where she has fled  after pictures were published of her apparently snorting a white substance. The reality star has already been sacked from a lucrative £250,000-a-year  job as the face of Iceland.  Earlier, Kerry had spent the day at a water park soaking up the sunshine with her children. It seems she is struggling to hold it together after a week of intense scrutiny and that the pressure became too much and Kerry ended up sitting on the floor with Mark holding her in his arms. At one point she covered her face with her hands and appeared to be crying. 

Read more on: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1207790/Kerry-Katona-arms-Mark-Croft-holiday-flees-Tenerife-white-powder-scandal.html#ixzz0OiXJBySZ

The costs involved in obtaining that home of a lifetime

 

The true cost of buying your home is amazing

The true cost of buying your dream home can be amazing

If people realised how much it costs to move house over a lifetime, we might just start looking for a real home sooner rather than later.

The story of Alfonso De Marco is enough to strike fear into the heart of  hard-pressed estate agents. Mr De Marco, a 107-year-old retired ice cream parlour owner, has lived in Britain since 1909. And in that time how much has he paid in fees to estate agents or letting agents while moving home? Precisely zero. He has just celebrated 100 years at the same  “I love it here, it is my home,” he told reporters last week. “I could have moved somewhere else but I have never wanted to.”  Just imagine if we all took his attitude, we wouldn’t spend precious time thumbing through the pages of the Tenerife Property Guide in search of our dream home.

 No wonder Mr De Marco has lived to be 107. Just think what he has missed out on over the years. He hasn’t had to suffer that coronary-inducing dash to complete a purchase before the gazumpers arrive. He hasn’t suffered disappointment when a property that seemed a good deal turns out to have just gone He hasn’t had the millstone of a mortgage, nor experienced negative equity.

Think of the money we would save if we followed Mr De Marco’s example. Until the property bubble burst  and slowed us down, we were, as a nation, in the habit of moving home approximately every seven years and buying that  second home in Tenerife as well. In other words, we buy and sell around seven houses during our adult lives.  We will have spent  around €85,000 in property tax alone in our lifetimes.

Assuming we pay estate agents to sell our homes we will spend a further amount in estate agents’ fees. Then there  might be the cost of solicitors’ fees -  and the cost of removal vans, reprinting our personalised stationery and so on - perhaps another €1000 per move. Then there is the cost of redecorating each property to remove the previous owners’  taste. That is going to cost at least €10,000 per property on average.

All in all, that adds up to around €215,000 spent moving home in our lifetimes - which is more than the average 65 year-old has in a pension fund. Just think of all those extra holidays in retirement in Tenerife had we not blown our earnings moving house so much or how much bigger our dream home in the sun might have been!

 As far as I am concerned there is only one way to go house hunting: imagine, like Mr De Marco, that you will still be there in 100 years. If the thought of being stuck in Stoke for the next century is abhorrent, forget it: don’t buy that dream  house until you have found a property in which you really would be satisfied to live until you are carted away in a box. Then move there and stay there. While your friends waste their lives upsizing and then downsizing, you can stay the same size - and enjoy yourself and the weather in Tenerife.

Buy now, pay later in Spain and its Territories

Buy now, pay later in Tenerife

Buy now, pay later in Tenerife?

Some  firms  are offering homes for sale in Spain and its territories with the option of paying an initial deposit and the balance in two years’ time. This is an attempt to stimulate demand for property in Spain, following a difficult couple of years for the market, which has seen property prices fall.

Spain remains the number one choice for prospective buyers as they appreciate they will have a better standard of living, substantially lower utility and council tax bills, easy access to the UK and fantastic all year round weather (especially in Tenerife. Property prices in Spain and its territories are better than they have been for some years, with deals now available that will ensure people of a happy investment for years to come.  It is estimated that there are currently around one million homes lying empty in Spain, (many of them being in Tenerife).

Now is a great time to get that bargain, or dream home you long for - and at a more affordable price than you could have imagined. There can be no better time to check out your estate agents for bargains than the present!