Back Menu
Should you sell your investment property?

Should you sell your investment property?

Private Property South Africa
Press

There are those who believe you should never sell an investment property, especially if it’s paid off, generating an income for you every month in the form of rental and increasing in value.

“But times and circumstances and areas change, and properties tend to require more maintenance as they age, so it is certainly worth considering a different point of view,” says Gerhard Kotzé, MD of the RealNet estate agency group.

“It may be, for example, that your property has reached the rental ceiling for the block or area in which it is situated, while the levies and / or municipal rates are still rising – and diminishing the returns on your investment. If you sold it and put the proceeds towards the purchase of a property that you could rent for more, you could restore and perhaps even increase those returns.”

Similarly, he says, as your investment property ages, you should at least run the numbers to see whether it would be worth “replacing” it with a newly-built one that could mean a significant reduction in maintenance costs for the next few years.

“It could also be that the area itself has changed since you bought the property and is no longer so attractive to potential tenants. Both suburbs and holiday towns can fall out of favour, and then once again you might want to sell the property and buy another in an area with higher rental demand and greater capital growth potential.

“In fact, if you do find yourself in this situation, you should appoint a great local agent and sell as soon as possible or risk losing the opportunity to maximise the profit you can make on the property.”

See more: How to work out the return on your property investment

Finally, says Kotzé, there might come a time when you simply need to “cash out”, to put a child through university, or to start a new business, or to purchase your own retirement home for cash.

“In other words, there are all sorts of reasons why you might want to sell an investment property. And while it is too costly in terms of transaction costs to buy and sell properties on the same time scale as one might trade shares, the property market is also dynamic, and as an investor you do need to keep constant track of it and be responsive to change.

“There is nothing wrong with making a move to from time to time to upgrade your property portfolio and ensure that the money you have invested continues to work for you. After all, the whole point of investing in anything is to build wealth.”

Read more: Finding the funds for foreign property investment

Found this content useful?

Get the best of Private Property's latest news and advice delivered straight to your inbox each week

Related Articles

Window opening for serious property investors
The tight conditions in the property market at the moment represent some good opportunities for investors with a medium- to long-term outlook.
How, and why, to start investing in listed property
Statistics from the ASSOCIATION FOR SAVINGS and INVESTMENT SA show inflows of R4.6-billion into local property unit trusts for the year ended March 2011. Foreign investors are keen to get their hands on SA’s property stocks, and ...
6 tips for the first-time investor
1. Go for capital growth This is the most important consideration when buying an investment property. Capital growth will increase your equity or “net worth” more quickly than home loan repayments alone. Research annual median ...