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AIBU?

To think about buying a property in Portugal?

81 replies

NeoMaxiZoomDweebie · 23/06/2013 11:57

It's so frigging beautiful there....the properties are so cheap atm. I want one! DH is all surprised because I am not the adventurous type.

I would want us to have it for holidays and maybe retire there one day. I work from home (self employed) and at the moment am the main breadwinner so actually, if it weren't for two DC in full time education I would probably live there now...my business can be done anywhere.

I fantasize about being self sustainable...growing stuff...eating our own fish and veg and fruit....am I silly? I have only been to Portugal once and have no idea what the infrastructure is like! I did hear that healthcare isn't much cop.

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NeoMaxiZoomDweebie · 23/06/2013 12:03

No Portugese experts then?

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NeoMaxiZoomDweebie · 23/06/2013 12:32
Smile
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diddl · 23/06/2013 12:34

On the Algarve?

By October??

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NeoMaxiZoomDweebie · 23/06/2013 12:39

No not by October Grin

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diddl · 23/06/2013 12:58

Shame!Grin

Whereabouts are you looking?

Have rellies on the Algarve, but Summer would be too hot for me!

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Bowlersarm · 23/06/2013 12:59

Don't know too much about it, only from a going-there-on-holiday perspective. But we've just come back from a short holiday there and two things struck us. 1) that food was massively more expensive than last time went, it cost a fortune to eat out even at what would have been cheap restaurants in the past and think that applies to all goods/services 2) there were loads and loads of unsold houses, and a whole development unsold and going to ruin near where we were staying.

It is probably easy to pick up a cheap property, and it is a gorgeous place, so if you have enough finance, well, why not?!

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NeoMaxiZoomDweebie · 23/06/2013 13:03

How expensive Bowlers? What are we talking here? London prices or worse?

I wasn't really looking at it from that perspective...

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DowntonTrout · 23/06/2013 13:04

Depends where you mean in Portugal.

As Bowlersarm said it seems to have got more expensive, not less, in certain areas- were you near Almancil Bowlers? If so I know exactly the development you mean, although I'm sure there are lots.

We would love a property there but with the economy being at absolute rock bottom there and the unemployment problems Portugal has I would be nervous about investing in the current climate.

You are right though, it is lovely, I much prefer it to Spain where we did own property at one time.

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Bowlersarm · 23/06/2013 13:40

OP we tended to eat out a lot so am slightly unsure about supermarket prices as we only bought fruit/yoghurt/cereals/milk there but eating out cost us on average ?150/?160. The cheapest was ?100, the most expensive ?220. We are a family of five including teenagers so we eat a fair amount although hardly any alcohol (maybe one bottle of wine) was included in that.

They have introduced a toll to pay on the motorway (A22 I think it is?) and all the touristy things like water parks seem more expensive. I suppose if you use the beach a lot then that is cheaper.

DowntonTrout we were further along than Almancil, but I think you're right, the area seems to have a few unsold housing estates, plus many individual properties.

I do think it would be a fantastic place to have a holiday home though, if finances were in place. They seem to rent out fairly easily if you look at the availability on something like the owners direct website, so would provide a fair bit of income I would think?

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TimeofChange · 23/06/2013 13:47

If you buy a house abroad, don't be surprised for it to decrease in value at some time.

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travailtotravel · 23/06/2013 13:52

Well, if you're serious about the idea you need to take a trip and find out. Are there any MNers on the expat/living overseas thread who could have advice?

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DowntonTrout · 23/06/2013 14:15

I was there a couple of weeks ago.

We go to the golden triangle (Almancil, Vale do Lobo, Quinta do Lago) once or twice a year. We spend a few weeks in summer there.

It is ridiculously expensive to eat out in that area. They charge the prices though, because they can. I think it is cheaper outside that area but prices are still high. I noticed this time that prices had gone up by about 10% on last year. Which is crazy. Towards Spain, past Faro, it seems much cheaper. And if you cross the border into Spain it is really cheap.

Not sure about further along the Algarve towards Lagos though as we haven't been along that way for some time.

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NeoMaxiZoomDweebie · 23/06/2013 14:42

TimeOfChange should I care about that really? I don't. I want somewhere nice to live...eventually and somewhere nice to go away to. I'd live there right now if I were mad enough to home educate in a foreign country...which I'm not.

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McNewPants2013 · 23/06/2013 15:43

If you are going to use it as a holiday home then I would go for it, you could always rent it out to close friends and trusted family.

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GypsyFloss · 23/06/2013 15:56

I love Portugal ,we've been going there for many years and buying a holiday home there is on our list of things to do. But it is tempered by the cost of traveling. Our flights next month are double what we paid last July, Easyjet no longer fly from our nearest airport to Faro, BA no longer fly at weekends from London city so that leaves us a trek to Gatwick or Ryanair who are as expensive as BA right now.

If I have a house there I want to be able to pop over whenever I fancy,not just once or twice a year 'cos the flights are too dear.

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NeoMaxiZoomDweebie · 23/06/2013 15:57

That's interesting Gypsy I wonder why that is?

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tupuedes · 23/06/2013 16:13

Do you speak the language? Know anything of the culture and legal system? IMO anyone who buys a property abroad without answering yes to those questions is barmy. Sick of seeing these types on "holiday homes from hell" crying about how they lost £200k in some far off country they knew nothing about and demanding UK taxpayer intervention.

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GypsyFloss · 23/06/2013 16:19

No idea, it's rightly pissed me off though! We book as soon as they're released, so last Sept for this July and they are £1450 for four of us. Once upon a time I could get flights, car hire and rental for 1k.

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NeoMaxiZoomDweebie · 23/06/2013 16:27

See I don't think that's too hideous Gypsy but that's probably because I'm used to trying to find money for flights to Oz to visit DHs parents a lot! that's about 4 grand for four of us!

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garlicnutty · 23/06/2013 16:31

I want to retire to Portugal :) It looks as if I never will be able to retire, as it goes, but I still go fantasy house shopping on a regular basis!

Brits often equate "Portugal" with the Algarve, which is totally daft it you look at a map. My location of choice would be Nazaré, on the Northern coast. It's a wonderful old fishing port and has been targeted for regeneration funds. It still has the old town, with houses that are built on a Moorish-type courtyard model. I love them. Nazaré is easily reached from Lisbon or Oporto, and is on major roads & railway. It has one of those beaches with a very wide fall - almost a km at low tide. It is a surfing centre. Figuera da Foz is lovely, too.

There are loads of other enchanting towns along that stretch, including the walled mediaeval city Coimbra - it's really lively and historically gorgeous, and was cheap last time I looked.

Seaside resorts outside of Lisbon are still cheap for property, and gaining popularity with ex-pat Brits. Lisbon itself, and Oporto, are both fun places to live (Lisbon if you're an arty type.) The Douro valley is breathakingly beautiful, has good road & rail service, and laughably cheap compared to somewhere like the Loire.

The region over to the East, called Tràs-os-Montes, is the most untouched, "real", rural Portugal and land is ridiculously cheap there. Road & rail services are still weak, however, which is why it's remained stuck in the past. Ime, you can still be frozen out around there for not being traditionally Portuguese. I've met some English couples who settled there for farming, and made a good success of it, but it wouldn't be my recommendation for an easy retirement.

The Algarve climate is completely different from the rest of Portugal. North of the Monchique, it's cooler and wetter although still much milder than the UK. I believe you can still find affordable fincas for renovation in the Serra de Monchique, which can give you the best of all worlds as long as you're okay with driving on rough mountain roads and organising renovations. Quite a few low-profile expat millionaires have done so.

Portuguese food is big on fish and pork. In the towns, now, you also find Brazilian churrascerias with barbecued meats to die for.

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GoodtoBetter · 23/06/2013 16:38

Yes, Coimbra is gorgeous, isn't it garlic? Memories....Still, Portuguese is a bit of a bastard to understand and pronounce and you wouldn't catch me buying property somewhere I didn't speak the langauge.

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NeoMaxiZoomDweebie · 23/06/2013 16:39

Yes Garlic I agree. It's not all about the Algarve at all. It's a stunning country...thanks for the tips about the East...not looked there.

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GypsyFloss · 23/06/2013 16:57

We have family up in Sintra which is very beautiful.

The language is indeed interesting..I've been trying to learn it for years now. It sometimes surprises me even in the Algarve how quickly you can go from English being spoken widely to only Portuguese being heard. One of my favourite memories is walking around a tiny hamlet in the foot of the mountains with my very blonde DD , where all the older ladies came out to say hello, chat about her and offer us fruit from their orchards. I reckon I got about one word in ten...in fact it's quite possible I was agreeing to trade her for 5 apricots and a goat Grin

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GoodtoBetter · 23/06/2013 17:02

I can read it quite well because of my Spanish but can't make head nor tail of spoken Portuguese.Grin

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garlicnutty · 23/06/2013 17:03

I've just found this lovely blog entry about a visit to Tràs-os-Montes. If you don't read Spanish, just look at the pictures ... these were taken six months ago, but might as well have been 60 years!

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