Lake Properties Lake Properties
Lake Properties Lake Properties
Using an existing property to buy another property in South Africa is a common strategy, especially for building wealth through property. Here are the main ways you can do it:
✅ 1. Access Equity (Refinancing/Bond Switch)
You can use the equity (value you've already paid off) in your current property to access cash.
How it works:
- Apply for a further loan or re-advance with your current bank.
- Alternatively, do a bond switch to another bank offering a better rate and higher loan amount.
- The cash you release is used as a deposit or full payment for another property.
๐น Example: If your house is worth R1.5 million and your bond balance is R800,000, you have R700,000 in equity. You might access up to 80–90% of this.
✅ 2. Use the Property as Security for a Second Bond (Second Property Finance)
Instead of drawing equity, you offer your existing property as collateral to the bank for a loan to purchase another.
Key points:
- Bank registers another bond against your current property.
- Riskier if your income is limited—banks assess affordability and loan-to-value.
✅ 3. Sell the Property to Fund the Next One
If you don't want to carry two bonds:
Steps:
- Sell your current property.
- Use the proceeds (after bond settlement) as a deposit or full payment for the new property.
- Often used when you plan to upgrade or downsize.
✅ 4. Rent Out Existing Property to Cover Bond
If you're not selling:
- Keep the current property and rent it out.
- Use the rental income to help qualify for another bond.
- Banks will consider up to 70–80% of rental income when assessing affordability.
✅ 5. Register the Property in a Trust or Company
If you’re investing:
- Move your existing property into a trust or company.
- Free up your personal credit profile for another bond.
- Requires tax planning and legal advice to avoid high costs or CGT (capital gains tax).
๐ Things to Consider
- Bond affordability: SA banks check your monthly income vs debt carefully (using your credit score and expenses).
- Transfer costs: Buying a second property means paying transfer duty (unless it's under R1.1m).
- Tax impact: If it's for investment, you'll pay rental income tax and possibly capital gains tax when you sell.
๐ฆ Tip:
Use a bond originator like ooba or BetterBond — they can assess multiple banks at once and help structure financing using your existing property.
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