Retirement village options: What you need to know
It’s time to weigh up your retirement village options. When the time comes to sell your family home and move to a retirement village, your most likely choice is to be between a sectional title development and a life rights complex.
“And there are quite a number of factors you will need to consider when looking at your retirment village options. Says Gerhard Kotzé, MD of the RealNet estate agency group. “For a start, a life rights purchase is usually cheaper than a sectional title unit which is a big benefit.
When you look at your retirement village options, remember that you’re not actually purchasing real estate and there are also no transfer duties, VAT or property registration costs to pay. What you are buying is the right to live in a certain unit in the complex until you and your spouse have both passed away.
“In most instances, you will also be buying access to on-site healthcare and related services at an affordable, predictable cost, which is very important to consider as your healthcare needs are likely to increase faster than your income as you age.”
With most retirement village options, under life rights, he says, the development company is usually still involved in the management of the cottages or apartments in the complex and any other facilities such as a community centre or frail-care unit, because it is the actual owner of the property. This can also be beneficial as the developer has a vested interest in maintaining the village and adding to the facilities offered.
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“In most instances, the developer will also establish a ‘stabilisation fund’ at the outset to help keep monthly levies down and enable buyers on fixed incomes to budget with certainty.”
However, life rights does have some drawbacks, one of which is that it is not possible to obtain a home loan to make a life rights purchase, because there is no underlying security for the loan.
Retirement village options after you pass
In addition, with most retirement village options, you cannot bequeath the unit you live in to your heirs. When you die, the right to live in it will be sold again by the development company, and your heirs will most likely only “inherit” a percentage of your initial investment, with the balance going into the stabilisation fund.
On the other hand, says Kotzé, when you buy a unit in a sectional title development, you become the owner of that unit and an undivided share in the common property of the retirement village, which is an asset that you can freely resell or leave to your heirs.
“Along with the other owners, you also become a member of the body corporate responsible for managing and running the complex and, if you do that well, you or your heirs will get the full benefit of any appreciation in the value of the property.
“The disadvantage of this type of purchase, though, is that many of the facilities that add value to a retirement village, such as a clubhouse, recreation centre, dining hall, assisted living facilities or a frail-care unit are very expensive to build and run, and that you could end up without access to such facilities if you and your fellow members of the body corporate cannot afford to provide or manage them.
“And that could mean facing another move at an advanced age if you become chronically ill or frail.”
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