What will you do in your summer holidays?
Summer time is a great time to take stock of your business and a great time to think about and diarise some property housekeeping issues that quite often get overlooked in the bustle of normal day to day business.
However if you consider this now, you can plan to carry out some crucial housekeeping duties in January when business is traditionally quieter.
Some of the not so sexy but absolutely essential items to consider to maximise your return and minimise your cost and risk are as follows:
Property Replacement Insurance: given the sizeable increases in construction costs in recent times, have you considered whether your properties are correctly insured? Do you know what you are insuring: base building and / or fit out?
Capital Expenditure Planning: what items have you planned over the next calendar year? How will they be managed?
Maintenance: are your maintenance contracts up to date and appropriate? Are there any routine maintenance items that can be efficiently attended to in this quiet time?
Tax and asset updates: Is your base schedule correct? Have you carried out any upgrade works during the financial year to date for which you can claim either a tax write off or a future tax deduction?
Condition Audits: Do you need to create or update any condition surveys of your tenanted properties?
Tenancy Make Good: Do you have a schedule of lease expiries that will occur during the year? Are there any “repairing and make good” obligations that need to be planned with the tenant?
N&B can assist with all of the above to help you really enjoy your summer holiday.
So you think you can’t afford it
A number of our articles have covered a variety of individual topics in isolation but in reality they’re all inextricably linked providing the platform for balance and maximum return from your property investments.
Our affordability index provides an amalgamation of a variety of property information to provide a balanced look at how your asset might perform over a period of time and how you can influence that performance.
Whether the investment is residential or non residential the same basics apply –
§ How much is it going to cost me
§ What risks are involved
§ What return will I secure
These questions then have multiple layers – how much is it going to cost me initially and in the short and long term, what kind of costs are they, capital, repairs and maintenance, refurbishment or compliance costs. What must I do legally, what must I spend to benefit and retain the tenant.