@nell2.02: ##visbilitésurtikto🇨🇻🇧🇾🇿🇦🇩🇪🇺🇳🇨🇩

nell2.02
nell2.02
Open In TikTok:
Region: CG
Sunday 29 June 2025 14:25:47 GMT
231
104
13
1

Music

Download

Comments

les.jumelles125
les jumelles 125 :
tu es vraiment très beau ☺️
2025-12-21 20:49:19
0
user555036263474
bretch bantsimba :
Barber ☺️
2025-07-02 11:42:41
0
ozil.blacka.vrai
Ozil Blacka vrai vrai :
Embeudar
2026-01-09 17:01:29
0
douani.chrishina
La fierté de monsieur Douani ✨ :
😂😂😂
2025-07-02 09:02:05
1
edern.ngangan
edern ngangan :
2025-12-23 10:05:03
1
lekingofficiel0
le king guydevi :
🥰🥰🥰
2025-07-05 04:16:39
0
icipassaleking
Le king guydevi :
jonel une doz
2025-08-08 05:58:03
0
melonmounkala
MELON :
cool
2025-11-26 15:57:50
0
makoundou59
josiane :
barder
2025-12-03 12:18:05
0
roy.good12
Roy good :
🥰🥰🥰
2025-12-15 14:05:50
0
edern.ngangan
edern ngangan :
toujours beau
2025-12-23 10:04:44
0
To see more videos from user @nell2.02, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Renting vs buying. Here's the honest answer nobody gives you. Right now, renting is technically cheaper than buying in most of the UK. The average monthly rent is £1,547 against a typical new mortgage payment of £1,670, a difference of £123 a month. So no, buying is not automatically the cheaper option today. But that comparison has a flaw. Rent rises. Private rents in the UK increased 3.5% in the 12 months to April 2026, according to the ONS. Over ten, twenty, thirty years, that compounds into a number most renters haven't sat down to calculate. A fixed-rate mortgage locks your payment for years at a time. Rent rises almost every year. Over the long term, that difference compounds. And then the mortgage ends. Probably in their 60s, the buyer's housing cost drops close to zero. The lifelong renter is still paying market rent at 70, 75, into retirement. Buying isn't the only path. But not buying requires a plan: building enough wealth through investing or other means to cover a perpetual housing cost in retirement. Most people renting in their 20s and 30s haven't made that plan yet. The question worth asking isn't
Renting vs buying. Here's the honest answer nobody gives you. Right now, renting is technically cheaper than buying in most of the UK. The average monthly rent is £1,547 against a typical new mortgage payment of £1,670, a difference of £123 a month. So no, buying is not automatically the cheaper option today. But that comparison has a flaw. Rent rises. Private rents in the UK increased 3.5% in the 12 months to April 2026, according to the ONS. Over ten, twenty, thirty years, that compounds into a number most renters haven't sat down to calculate. A fixed-rate mortgage locks your payment for years at a time. Rent rises almost every year. Over the long term, that difference compounds. And then the mortgage ends. Probably in their 60s, the buyer's housing cost drops close to zero. The lifelong renter is still paying market rent at 70, 75, into retirement. Buying isn't the only path. But not buying requires a plan: building enough wealth through investing or other means to cover a perpetual housing cost in retirement. Most people renting in their 20s and 30s haven't made that plan yet. The question worth asking isn't "should I buy?" It's: if I don't, what does my housing cost look like at 65? This post is for educational purposes only and does not constitute personal financial advice. Property values can fall as well as rise. Your individual circumstances will affect what is right for you. Speak to an FCA-regulated financial adviser or mortgage broker before making property or investment decisions. Sources: Rightmove rent vs mortgage data, April 2026 | ONS Price Index of Private Rents, April 2026

About