1. Dont know an answer to this question. Being a small town the market hasnt really moved. We have put 25k or so into the house with new bathroom, kitchen, 2 new rooms etc and we were told it would be only worth 160k and we paid 148k for it bout 3-4yrs ago
If you've already put $25k into it and only seen the value go up by $12k I'd be really hesitant to put any more money into it ... do what you can without spending too much.
3. How would i rent a house i like to buy if its not for rent just for sale?
If you see a house you like that has been on the market a long time and is vacant, there's a good chance the current owner would be happy to have a tenant.
6. What is CGT?
Capital Gains Tax ... the government normally taxes any increase in value (at time of sale) of an investment property.
As you currently live in the house you can nominate it as your "Principle Place of Residence" (PPoR), while you don't live there, for up to six years.
You don't pay CGT on your PPoR, but (obviously) you can only have one PPoR.
I also should state also we have 2 personal loans that make things harder. One is around 13k and the other is around 18k
These should be paid off ASAP ... can you get a line of credit on your house (at a lower rate than your personal loans) to pay these off? A trap to be weary of here though ... make sure you don't go and get more personal loans!
A couple of other points:
1. Keep all receipts for work on your house ... if you do rent it out and find you have to pay CGT, these receipts will reduce the amount payable.
2. If you do rent your house out, try not to spend any money on the house before you rent it out ... any money you spend before it has a tenant is basically considered part of the cost of buying the property (reduces CGT, but not an immediate tax deduction). Once you've got a tenant in then "maintenance" should be tax deductable.
3. If you do find yourself with two houses (the one you live in and one you rent out), you want to owe as little as possible on the house you live in so that more of your interest is tax deductible. Note that it's what you spend the money for each loan on that is important here ... those personal loans - are they for the work you've had done on your house? If you later rent your house the associated interest should be tax deductible.
4. Following on from #3, you don't want to spend cash on your current house ... all cash should go towards your new house. Anything you spend on the house that is going to be rented out should be borrowed (until you have no personal debt) ... get a home equity loan that you use for ANY such expenditure. Need to buy a letterbox for the house you're putting tenants in? Don't pay cash, ensure it comes out of the home equity loan (use your cash to reduce your non-deductible interest).
5. Even if you're not buying a house straight away, don't pay cash for anything for the house you've got tenants in ... put whatever cash you have in an offset account to reduce your interest. When it comes time to buy a house you can clean out that offset account for the deposit.
[does that all make sense?]