Buyers can flip State-backed apartments and keep profits

Seen and heard: the new Croí Cónaithe scheme, mortgage demand and TransferMate’s valuation

The new Croí Cónaithe scheme will subsidise the cost of building apartments by providing developers with subsidies of between €25,000 and €144,000 per unit. Photograph: Alan Betson / The Irish Times
The new Croí Cónaithe scheme will subsidise the cost of building apartments by providing developers with subsidies of between €25,000 and €144,000 per unit. Photograph: Alan Betson / The Irish Times

A clause in the new €450 million State subsidy plan for developers will allow people who purchase apartments through the scheme to pocket as much as 80 per cent of any profit from a quick resale if they choose to flip the property, the Business Post has learned.It comes as fresh pressure is placed on the government to scrap the scheme by the opposition, who labelled it a “bonanza for developers” and the “craziest housing scheme any minister with responsibility for housing has brought before us”, the Business Post reports.

The new Croí Cónaithe scheme, which will subsidise the cost of building apartments by providing developers with subsidies of between €25,000 and €144,000 per unit, has been created by the government to help stimulate the construction of apartments. New details of the scheme released to developers by the Housing Agency have now revealed that purchasers cannot be stopped from quickly reselling the homes and keeping the vast bulk of any profit made, with only a small clawback of the subsidy required if properties are quickly resold.

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