k.w.l.
New Member
I suppose a deal could be worked out where an all cash buyer would pay significantly less phantom rent but then he wouldn't have the cash and earning potential of the cash. I'm sure you follow my point.
Interest on the unpaid balance is the largest component of occupancy fees, so an all cash buyer could certainly pay less if they chose to pay it all up front. They'd have to evaluate whether the savings in occupancy fees would be more than what they could otherwise earn with that cash.
After reading this, I think if I was buying a new condo I would ask the bank to include any payments incurred up to the point of registration in the mortgage.
Nice sentiment but occupancy fees aren't paid to the bank, they're paid to the developer.
Interim occupancy is not a great situation but there's no excuse for a purchaser not knowing about it going in. As others have said this is really an issue with the bureaucracy, not the builders. The builder still has plenty of incentive to finish as quickly as possible, as occupancy fees are a drop in the bucket for them compared to what they'll get at closing - even the deposits they receive as down-payments are held in trust and can't be accessed by them until closing.