A New Breed of Investors are Checking Into Buy to Let Apart-hotels

Conceived in the USA back in the 1980s, the apart- or condo- hotel concept of marrying second homes with investing in property has now skipped across the Atlantic and matured to appeal to a new breed of investors. In the traditional buy-to-let role it’s the owner who has to put in the hard graft of attracting, vetting and possibly evicting tenants, not to mention collecting the rent and carrying out maintenance and ad-hoc repairs. Apart-hotels are now threatening to kick traditional buy-to-let where it hurts as one of its key selling points is that it’s managed and marketed on the investors’ behalf and therefore hassle-free.
Sometimes called ‘serviced apartments’ in the UK, Apart-hotels are springing up all over urban centres and coastal resorts at an impressive rate, in what Jones Lang La Salle describes as Europe being “in the midst of a hotel transaction boom”. Previously we had the timeshare boom, a vehicle that was great for lifestyle and regular usage but wholly ineffective for investment as owners faced low liquidity of assets, high depreciation, restrictions on resale and no actual real estate ownership. Today via the Apart-hotel model, participants own the freehold of a quality real estate asset with the added value of high rental returns. All of this is then underpinned by capital appreciation. Additionally Apart-hotels tend to give higher levels of income than traditional holiday homes but the real deal-maker for the investor is the complete absence of headaches as a branded hotel management company takes them all on.
For an Apart-hotel to work and be able to compete against traditional luxury hotel chains all the ingredients have to be right. Optimum locations, comprehensive facilities, a respected developer, strong brand awareness and of course good on-site management are just some of those ingredients. But in reality, Apart-hotels are carving their own niche in the marketplace rather than taking on traditional hotel chains head-to-head, as their offering to the holidaying public is very different.
Ian Hayes, Sales Director of Owner Invest said:
‘Although quite new in Europe, our buy to let Apart-hotel products are quite literally flying off the shelves because they are so attractive and easy to understand. The pricing is affordable for many, the rental returns attractive, capital appreciation, free usage, great locations and the investor owns the freehold. They’re also tax efficient. The hardest question that we come across time and again from potential buyers is that it sounds too good to be true. I can quite categorically say that it’s not!’
The clue is in the name, Apart-hotels are more ‘apartments’ rather than ‘rooms’ and even the largest traditional hotel suite would be hard-pushed to compete. With generous square metre sizes relaxing, entertaining, dining, working and sleeping can be done in separate areas enabling the children to sleep whilst Dad watches TV and Mum enjoys a glass of wine with friends. An equipped kitchen also allows the flexibility of eating in thus saving money and releasing guests from strict hotel meal timetables – a lazy late breakfast in bed is now a possibility. Likewise a washing machine saves on laundry costs or taking home a case full of dirty linen.
An Apart-hotel feels like home-from-home.Marbella Royal Suites for example, has come about through a partnership between Owner Invest and hotel management team Kasamia. This resort ticks the boxes for 1) Location – Benahavis is just ten minutes from Marbella and Puerto Banus and the resort overlooks the sweeping fairways of El Paraiso golf course. And in an established tourist destination such as the Costa del Sol, passenger numbers for Málaga International Airport in 2007 are up a mammoth 43% on 2000 to 13.5 million and resort and hotel occupancy rates remain encouragingly high. 2) Comprehensive facilities – Multiple swimming pools, fitness centre, Spa and business centre, 3) Good on-site management – Resort management team Kasamia, the brains behind Accor and Club Med, use distribution networks built up over many years to maximise occupancy rates and returns and are also responsible for maintaining the investors asset to an immaculate state of repair and cleanliness. More info about the Royal Suites buy to let opportunity can be found here
Similar to other Apart-hotel resorts Marbella Royal Suites has all-inclusive fully-furnished pricing, an absence of bills and annual charges and eight weeks personal usage each year. Its also SIPPs eligible if the investor doesn’t require the personal use. You can find out more about using Self Invested Personal Pensions to purchase investment products such as these on www.ownerinvest.com/sipp
Operating on a seven-year leaseback scheme, owners receive a 50% net share of rental income on a ‘pooled’ basis – so even if their particular unit is unoccupied, others will be.
Prices start at 99,000 GBP for a fully furnished 1 bedroom apartment. 2 bedroom apartments are available from 168,000 GBP and, according to the valuation by Spanish bank Banesto, are already worth 235,000 GBP arriving with 30% capital already built in.
Buy to let Apart-Hotels could be the simplest yet most lucrative real estate investment on offer today.
Help answer the question about last minute hotel deals new
Holiday booked for 3 people with 18-30, one of the party is over 35, advice please!?My 2 friends & I have been searching for a last minute holiday deal.
My friend called me at work last night & said she found a really good deal on the Thomas cook web site.
She booked, everything seemed fine sent me a copy of the confirmation as we collect our tickets at the airport in 2 days.
I've had a look at the Thomas Cook website, the holiday is provided by Club 18-30 (this info was in tiny writing under the photograph of the hotel & not mentioned any where else).
I've checked their (club 18-30) website & it states maximum age is 35 & one of our party is going to be 37 on Sunday!
I've personally checked Thomas Cook web site & attempted to book the same holiday & at no stage it mentions the maximum age to travel on this holiday is 35.
I've tried to call them this morning but the lines are very busy & I won't be able to contact them until I'm on my lunch hour.
I'm just looking for any advice on what I can do. At no stage during the online book does it mention a maximum age I on;y found this out by checking the club 18-30 web site.
About Author
Owner Invest specialises in sourcing buy to let investment property that has excellent potential for Return On Investment (ROI), is tax efficient (SIPP pension compatible) and offers low entry level access
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February 8th, 2010 at 23:49
Thanks for the vid, it is very inspirational to watch you paint!!!
February 9th, 2010 at 00:12
I found the article I think you are talking about. I only see two websites and they are tablethotels.com and luxurylink.com. The article was in the Wednesday May 23rd edition. I hope this helps. Let me know if you need anything else.
February 9th, 2010 at 00:13
I always get an unbelievable rate when I bid my own priceline at the last minute…..4 star hotels for $40. You can't beat that.
February 9th, 2010 at 00:53
you never dissapoint me.
you are a real artist.
i hope one day you can be recognized in all around theworld
February 9th, 2010 at 03:24
wow. all those little details are just perfection. and beautiful music too. 5 star:)
February 9th, 2010 at 03:31
try http://www.hotelreservations.com/
http://www.hoteltopten.com/
February 9th, 2010 at 06:22
I use hotels.com a lot. I highly recommend them.
February 9th, 2010 at 07:36
Shopping on travel sites is like shopping with coupons and planning to use your coupon when the store has its own sales so you get the stuff basically for free. It's worth it if you're motivated and have the time. Those last-minute deals on travel sites are hooks to get you to book right away. However, if you already know where you're going, then it is actually a good deal for you. It's kind of like flying on stand-by, but if the deals are worth waiting for and you don't mind taking a chance you can't get a booking where you want, go for it. Otherwise, it's better to be safe than sorry. I'm wondering, though, can you book now and cancel later if you get a last minute deal you want to take? If that's an option for you, you can beat them at your own game. In any event, I hope you have a wonderful vacation.
February 9th, 2010 at 19:16
cool video and music
February 9th, 2010 at 21:59
amazing work, i would think it’s a photo!
February 10th, 2010 at 12:23
You are way late at this point, but you can try Ebay. Lots of people these days ticket share, meaning they buy a 5-day ticket (great savings) use 2 or 3 days themselves then sell the remaining days. You could do this yourself, but I would recommend putting it out on Ebay now and seeing if anyone bites for the last 3-days beforehand. The tickets are only good for 13 days from the first day used. Try the official Disney website for package deals. Also we stayed at Super 8 Katella for $40 per night so maybe check that out on Hotels.com. — Good Luck and Have Fun!
February 10th, 2010 at 13:05
You should have asked that question several months ago unless money is no object. You're going to have a very difficult time finding inexpensive airline seats and hotels now, especially to popular destinations. The week between Christmas and New Year's is one of the most heavily traveled weeks of the year and the discounts sell out far in advance.
I formerly worked in the travel industry and I had to break the bad new to last minute travelers every year.
Good luck!
February 10th, 2010 at 13:13
fantastic!
February 10th, 2010 at 19:22
you really captioned the mood of Johnny Depp!!!…wonderful painting!!!
February 11th, 2010 at 20:35
that is beyond. holy that is amazing. is it a picture or a painting. when you can blur those lines, you know you have something.great stuff thanx
February 12th, 2010 at 03:24
I have always found the best deal early. I am not saying that there are no last minute deals but I personally would not bank on that. 3 to 6 months depending on time of year and where. Example if you were to fly to Miami for Spring Break 6 to 8 months but if you were to fly to Green Bay for the same time frame you could probably make reservations 2 to 3 months ahead.
February 12th, 2010 at 04:14
Great actor great painting great music ,,lovely for real
February 12th, 2010 at 08:11
Since you haven't mentioned the specific details of your desired destination, so in such a case i am going to provide you a better link through which you can easily check the details of all hotels with cheap price in terms of services and features as well, not only this although you can make direct bookings as well
http://www.hotels.beginbooking.com/BrowseByCountry.aspx?a_aid=14156