Housing minister 'not happy' that affordable homes were priced above threshold for state loans
A REVIEW INTO house prices has been completed and decisions will be made 'rapidly' to make sure costs do not price out homeowners from availing of government's local authority home loan scheme, the housing minister has said.
His comments come after
the Irish Times reported today
that the price of affordable homes at a
new state-development in Co. Kildare
were above the threshold for new homeowners to avail of the mortgage scheme.
The Local Authority Home Loan is open to first-time buyers and fresh start applicants who wish to purchase a new or second-hand property or for self-build. It provides up to 90% of the market value of the property.
The maximum loan amount is determined by where the property is located. In Kildare, the local authority has limited the loan scheme to properties priced at €360,000 and under.
Three-bed homes at the new estate cost €370,000. Asked about the disparity today, Housing Minister James Browne said he was 'not happy' about it.
He said a review he commissioned on the issue was delivered to him yesterday.
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He told reporters in Dublin: 'We'll make a decision on those will be made very rapidly, so we can get that review carried out and finished and get limits increased where they need to be increased.
'But, absolutely, that disparity – I'm not happy with that, and I'm going to have that addressed.'
Minister James Browne said he was "not happy" about the disparity.
Alamy
Alamy
Homeowners have
previously told
The Journal
that they found the loan scheme 'restrictive' and that the details of the scheme, which have since been amended, were unclear.
The minister said he 'wouldn't be surprised' if other new developments were also above the thresholds set for the home loan scheme, which is why, he said, he commissioned that his department review the issue.
Browne said that he wanted to make sure that prices are aligned with the schemes available to families seeking to purchase homes.
'I want to try and get them aligned so that we don't have this type of disparity. I know it causes stress for families – I know one particular family that it cased an awful lot of stress for.
'I don't want that situation to happen. The government is spending record funding on delivering housing, on supporting people to get those homes, so that kind of misalignment – I certainly want to see an end of, and intend to being an end to that.'
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Extra.ie
6 hours ago
- Extra.ie
'I'm in charge', says Browne amid claims he's lost reins over his top civil servants
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Irish Times
9 hours ago
- Irish Times
Housing emergency? Ireland is not even acting at the level of mildly urgent
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The courts seem eager to quash planning permissions, often for flimsy reasons. But does all that excuse the Government's performance? Not at this stage. We are heading for a decade of failure to get to grips with a growing social disaster. That's long enough to fix things, even in Ireland. This is a Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil failure and they are running out of time to fix it. The evidence that things are going in the wrong direction is mounting lately. Last week, reported that the cost of renting increased by an average of 3.4 per cent in the first three months of 2025, with the increases taking the monthly average open-market rent to over €2,000 for the first time. Meanwhile, despite the skyrocketing rents, home ownership is in freefall among the young. This is deeply socially destabilising. A friend reports from a terrace of two-up-two-downers in Ringsend that there is a queue down the street of prospective renters for a nearby house. The rent? Nearly three grand a month. The figures for the delivery of new housing, meanwhile, are also going in the wrong direction. On Tuesday, the ESRI told an Oireachtas committee that there will be no big increase in housing supply this year or next year. The numbers might get to 34,000 this year and 37,000 in 2026, but 'most of the risks weigh on the downside'. [ ESRI to warn Government of no major uptick in housing supply this year or next Opens in new window ] And even if those numbers are achieved, that would require 78,000 houses to be completed for each of the following three years to meet the Government's promises of 300,000 units during its term. What, do we think, are the chances of that happening? Meanwhile, water utility Uisce Éireann has said that it may be unable to grant any new connections in the Dublin area by 2028 . 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He has been waiting seven months for clarity on one design feature. The entire industry is 'sitting on its hands', he says. The other developer spent three years preparing an application for permission for 500 units. The planning inspector recommended the go ahead. But An Bord Pleanála nixed it. The board could have put conditions on it and construction would be under way by now, but instead it refused outright. So, back to the drawing board. 'This is not a system that promotes supply,' the developer says. 'It is a system that retards supply.' [ Ireland's housing perma-crisis returns to centre of political agenda Opens in new window ] Everyone talks about an emergency, but the reality is that at no level is the system set up to deliver housing at scale and quickly. In fact, the very opposite seems to be the case. There is simply no way that the current system of housing provision – from finance to planning to utility provision to actual construction – can solve the housing crisis. There is a very quiet school of thought in parts of the Government that says the political fallout from all this is actually already baked in – that the people who are most concerned about housing don't vote for the Government parties anyway. I don't think that's right. I think there are a lot of people that gave Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael the benefit of the doubt on housing at the last election, but will turn against them if the crisis is not substantially eased by the next election. But even if I'm wrong about that, there is surely an overwhelming moral responsibility on the Government to fix housing. The only way to do this is to begin actually acting like it is an emergency. Special planning powers, tax incentives, rapid approval for expenditure – whatever it takes. Emergency? Come off it. We're not at the level of mildly urgent.


RTÉ News
9 hours ago
- RTÉ News
3 crucial issues facing the Government on housing
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The current rent caps expire at the end of this year, and the Government has to decide if it plans to retain them, alter them or abandon them altogether. Last month the Minister for Housing James Browne received a report from the Housing Agency which looked at options on the issue for the Government. The report highlighted significant problems with retaining the existing 2% cap and looked at alternatives including moving to a higher limit. Another option, suggested by Paris-based think tank the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, is allowing to landlords freely adjust rents when tenants move out. But the downside is that it could act as a financial incentive for property owners to evict tenants. The feeling in government circles is that any change is going to require a lot of work to make it clear to the public why an adjustment to the rent caps is being planned. That would likely see ministers preparing the ground by explaining the drawbacks with the existing restrictions, which are partly blamed by the industry for a 24% fall in apartment construction last year. Obviously fewer new homes leads to higher rents at a time when the population is growing, the economy is expanding and there are plenty of jobs. It is important to note that the cycle of higher interest rates, now being reduced, made some building projects unviable for investors over recent years and that too was a factor in the fall in house building last year. Many observers across the political spectrum and housing sector believe the Government will have an exceptionally tough decision to make on rent caps and will face vocal opposition. Sources within the Coalition say that high level talks are continuing and a decision is possible in the coming weeks. 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This week, Minister Browne said the State is now involved in supporting about 50% of the housing output. He argues that if completions are to increase "we have to activate the private sector". That means getting more private investor involvement - which explains why the Government is reviewing the rental caps. Water connections Homes can't be finished without connections to water and wastewater networks. Late last year, Irish Water/Uisce Éireann said it could only connect 35,000 properties a year over the next five years. The utility has become notably vocal about key issues which it feels are hampering urgently needed improvements and expansions of the water network. At the Oireachtas Committee on Infrastructure this week, Uisce Éireann CEO Niall Gleeson forecast it would spend €10.3bn on capital projects between 2025 and 2029. But he said the organisation required a further €2bn to achieve the Government's objective of building 300,000 homes over the next five years. He also criticised the existing funding model and said providing additional money annually creates uncertainty. He suggested multiannual funding to help deliver long-term projects. The Department of Housing says Uisce Éireann's request for an additional €2bn is being considered in the context of the revised National Development Plan which is expected to be published in July. Mr Gleeson also highlighted issues with the planning system and said some complex projects are taking more than a decade to get the green light. He called for reform of legislation to tackle the issue. The Government continually repeats that dealing with the housing crisis is the number one issue for this administration, but it has a lot to do before it can convince observers that significant progress is being made.