One in seven Kerry properties are holiday homes or vacant

https://m.independent.ie/regionals/kerry/news/one-in-seven-kerry-properties-are-holiday-homes-or-vacant/a967074812.html

Posted by Senior-Scarcity-2811

15 Comments

  1. Senior-Scarcity-2811 on

    I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again.

    Countless economic problems are being caused by the rich hoarding assets. This is another example of it.

    The tax on these should be absolutely punitive.

  2. Ambitious_Bill_7991 on

    Under normal circumstances, I’d have no problem with Airbnb. It should not be allowed in a housing crisis.

    I imagine a lot of these houses were granted planning permission as family homes and not holiday homes or for short-term leases.

    Nobody needs a holiday house. Plenty of families need a house.

    Edit: just to add. I firmly believe that any building being repurposed for anything other than its original purpose should have to reapply for planning permission.

  3. If you tried buying around the big towns in Kerry you just won’t be able to afford it. Anyone who has a house is using it as a short term let holiday let (usually air bnb). Holiday homes are another factor. But this is not a new problem it has happens in lots of places around the world, Cornwall in the UK is getting hit bad, it happens in places where the main industry is tourism and there is great scenic beauty.

  4. SnaggleWaggleBench on

    Paywalls so I can’t dig too deep, but how do they count them? We bought a home that was a down as a holiday home on planning. We confirmed we could get a mortgage on it as a full time residence and that we’re could live there year round before before going ahead on it, but I do wonder how we are categorised. Neighbours next door airbnb theirs basically from April to September.

  5. TheFreemanLIVES on

    Just to note how people savagely attack one off housing, but then go on as if having empty houses requiring all the same services is somehow alright. Also to mention the carbon intensity of keeping these places dry and warm during the winter.

    There might be a less of a demand for new one off housing if all these empty gaffs weren’t driving up prices and serving as a way for people avoid deemed disposal.

  6. Bogeydope1989 on

    It’s such a shame that the new generations are penalised from access to the property market. The older people have climbed the ladder, reached the top and then kicked it to the ground.

    It feels very unfair.

  7. Unlikely_Ad6219 on

    There’s villages in cork that go to more than 50 percent vacant for the winter.

  8. Doesn’t solve the problem but looks like (quick search) there’s actually double the amount of houses available to purchase in Kerry than Dublin when you take into account the population of both counties. Being able to purchase one, plus infrastructure etc is another story.