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On today’s episode, Niall dives into one of the most shocking and heartbreaking housing stories in Ireland right now — the collapse of the Ringfort Estate development in Rathmoylon, Co Meath, and the desperate families caught in the middle of it.
Niall is joined by Áontú leader Peadar Tóibín along with John Ennis and Elma Beirne, one of the couples who paid a deposit for a home in the estate five years ago. Elma, now pregnant, is among the fifteen buyers who signed contracts and paid deposits of €27,500–€30,000 in good faith. Today, only five still hold any hope of seeing those contracts honoured.
Despite the houses reportedly being completed and fully connected to utilities, none have been handed over. In 2023, buyers were suddenly asked for an extra €60,000 after the developer, Meathamatic Ltd, blamed rising costs. And now, in a dramatic turn, the company has been put into liquidation following a Revenue audit that uncovered major issues with unregistered construction contracts and a large VAT liability.
This week, tensions boiled over when affected buyers — including Elma — were initially blocked from entering the creditors’ meeting in Dún Laoghaire. Peadar Tóibín stood with them as they pushed for answers, demanding to know why the Government refuses to intervene and finish an estate that families have already paid for.
Why are completed homes sitting empty? How can a company collapse with buyers’ money tied up inside it? And what responsibility does the Government have when ordinary people are left homeless by failures in oversight?
Niall, Peadar, John, and Elma break down the human cost, the political failures, and what needs to happen next so these families finally have somewhere to live.
By Niall Boylan5
88 ratings
On today’s episode, Niall dives into one of the most shocking and heartbreaking housing stories in Ireland right now — the collapse of the Ringfort Estate development in Rathmoylon, Co Meath, and the desperate families caught in the middle of it.
Niall is joined by Áontú leader Peadar Tóibín along with John Ennis and Elma Beirne, one of the couples who paid a deposit for a home in the estate five years ago. Elma, now pregnant, is among the fifteen buyers who signed contracts and paid deposits of €27,500–€30,000 in good faith. Today, only five still hold any hope of seeing those contracts honoured.
Despite the houses reportedly being completed and fully connected to utilities, none have been handed over. In 2023, buyers were suddenly asked for an extra €60,000 after the developer, Meathamatic Ltd, blamed rising costs. And now, in a dramatic turn, the company has been put into liquidation following a Revenue audit that uncovered major issues with unregistered construction contracts and a large VAT liability.
This week, tensions boiled over when affected buyers — including Elma — were initially blocked from entering the creditors’ meeting in Dún Laoghaire. Peadar Tóibín stood with them as they pushed for answers, demanding to know why the Government refuses to intervene and finish an estate that families have already paid for.
Why are completed homes sitting empty? How can a company collapse with buyers’ money tied up inside it? And what responsibility does the Government have when ordinary people are left homeless by failures in oversight?
Niall, Peadar, John, and Elma break down the human cost, the political failures, and what needs to happen next so these families finally have somewhere to live.

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