Making an offer
Discussion
Right, so the O/H and I have finally agreed on a house we like. The asking price is £168k, they bought it in 2008 for £163,500. I would be tempted to go in at £160,000 which affordability wise is ideal for us (in terms of not having to change our lifestyle at all).
However the house next door which is as far as I can see the same, in terms of size, garden, parking etc sold in October for £155k. Maybe that's a good starting point but it's a big drop from the asking price.
What sort of cut do people expect from their asking price? It seems that judging by next door's price it's well overvalued at the mo.
Ben
However the house next door which is as far as I can see the same, in terms of size, garden, parking etc sold in October for £155k. Maybe that's a good starting point but it's a big drop from the asking price.
What sort of cut do people expect from their asking price? It seems that judging by next door's price it's well overvalued at the mo.
Ben
ywouldi said:
Right, so the O/H and I have finally agreed on a house we like. The asking price is £168k, they bought it in 2008 for £163,500. I would be tempted to go in at £160,000 which affordability wise is ideal for us (in terms of not having to change our lifestyle at all).
However the house next door which is as far as I can see the same, in terms of size, garden, parking etc sold in October for £155k. Maybe that's a good starting point but it's a big drop from the asking price.
What sort of cut do people expect from their asking price? It seems that judging by next door's price it's well overvalued at the mo.
Ben
Make a detailed offer to the Estate Agent with your reasoning (including next door selling price). What's your position? FTB? Need to sell? However the house next door which is as far as I can see the same, in terms of size, garden, parking etc sold in October for £155k. Maybe that's a good starting point but it's a big drop from the asking price.
What sort of cut do people expect from their asking price? It seems that judging by next door's price it's well overvalued at the mo.
Ben
hornetrider said:
ywouldi said:
Right, so the O/H and I have finally agreed on a house we like. The asking price is £168k, they bought it in 2008 for £163,500. I would be tempted to go in at £160,000 which affordability wise is ideal for us (in terms of not having to change our lifestyle at all).
However the house next door which is as far as I can see the same, in terms of size, garden, parking etc sold in October for £155k. Maybe that's a good starting point but it's a big drop from the asking price.
What sort of cut do people expect from their asking price? It seems that judging by next door's price it's well overvalued at the mo.
Ben
Make a detailed offer to the Estate Agent with your reasoning (including next door selling price). What's your position? FTB? Need to sell? However the house next door which is as far as I can see the same, in terms of size, garden, parking etc sold in October for £155k. Maybe that's a good starting point but it's a big drop from the asking price.
What sort of cut do people expect from their asking price? It seems that judging by next door's price it's well overvalued at the mo.
Ben
ywouldi said:
jeevescat said:
£155k is a good ending point, not starting.
Mmm, good point. How likely is it that a seller (I hate the word "vendor") will just think "sod them then". I wouldn't be insulted by lower offers but I know many might!
Decide what your top offer is and go in at that less 5%. Don't forget 20% VAT on all fees.
Edited by Thankyou4calling on Sunday 9th January 19:27
Thankyou4calling said:
ywouldi said:
jeevescat said:
£155k is a good ending point, not starting.
Mmm, good point. How likely is it that a seller (I hate the word "vendor") will just think "sod them then". I wouldn't be insulted by lower offers but I know many might!
Decide what your top offer is and go in at that less 5%. Don't forget 20% VAT on all fees.
Edited by Thankyou4calling on Sunday 9th January 19:27
Survey, conveyancing etc I assume? Thanks for the advice all!
ywouldi said:
Thankyou4calling said:
ywouldi said:
jeevescat said:
£155k is a good ending point, not starting.
Mmm, good point. How likely is it that a seller (I hate the word "vendor") will just think "sod them then". I wouldn't be insulted by lower offers but I know many might!
Decide what your top offer is and go in at that less 5%. Don't forget 20% VAT on all fees.
Edited by Thankyou4calling on Sunday 9th January 19:27
Survey, conveyancing etc I assume? Thanks for the advice all!
Thankyou4calling said:
Yes. Plus solicitors dibursements and estate agent fees. Don't know if there is VAT on stamp duty or even if it applies at this level.Keep us informed of what he deal is done and and dont fall out over a small amount.
FYI, Stamp Duty is not subject to VAT. Further, as a FTB there is no stamp duty under £250kscirocco265 said:
Thankyou4calling said:
Yes. Plus solicitors dibursements and estate agent fees. Don't know if there is VAT on stamp duty or even if it applies at this level.Keep us informed of what he deal is done and and dont fall out over a small amount.
FYI, Stamp Duty is not subject to VAT. Further, as a FTB there is no stamp duty under £250k
scirocco265 said:
Thankyou4calling said:
Yes. Plus solicitors dibursements and estate agent fees. Don't know if there is VAT on stamp duty or even if it applies at this level.Keep us informed of what he deal is done and and dont fall out over a small amount.
FYI, Stamp Duty is not subject to VAT. Further, as a FTB there is no stamp duty under £250krah1888 said:
scirocco265 said:
Thankyou4calling said:
Yes. Plus solicitors dibursements and estate agent fees. Don't know if there is VAT on stamp duty or even if it applies at this level.Keep us informed of what he deal is done and and dont fall out over a small amount.
FYI, Stamp Duty is not subject to VAT. Further, as a FTB there is no stamp duty under £250kHowever, some agencies are actually buyers' agents. See this as an example.
http://www.choices.co.uk/index.php?option=com_cont...
GTO-3R said:
scirocco265 said:
Thankyou4calling said:
Yes. Plus solicitors dibursements and estate agent fees. Don't know if there is VAT on stamp duty or even if it applies at this level.Keep us informed of what he deal is done and and dont fall out over a small amount.
FYI, Stamp Duty is not subject to VAT. Further, as a FTB there is no stamp duty under £250k
I hope your sale goes through without too much additional stress, though. Stressful times buying/selling homes. And expensive...
ywouldi said:
jeevescat said:
£155k is a good ending point, not starting.
Mmm, good point. How likely is it that a seller (I hate the word "vendor") will just think "sod them then". I wouldn't be insulted by lower offers but I know many might!
It's a buyer's market.
If they get insulted, so what? You're not talking to them face-to-face and what are they going to do? Tell you that you can't raise your offer and to go away? Only if they're morons.
Worse-case-scenario, they say it's not enough.
GTO-3R said:
scirocco265 said:
Thankyou4calling said:
Yes. Plus solicitors dibursements and estate agent fees. Don't know if there is VAT on stamp duty or even if it applies at this level.Keep us informed of what he deal is done and and dont fall out over a small amount.
FYI, Stamp Duty is not subject to VAT. Further, as a FTB there is no stamp duty under £250k
Do you know the sellers onward plans? If they're moving up then it may be that that's only possible for them due to falling prices compressing the step up to the next level.
My daughter just paid less for a house than the sellers paid themselves in 2005. But they were anxious to grab a bungalow that was being vacated by a lady going into care. I reckon they were first people I've ever dealt with who actually wanted to sell their house - most sellers seem like they're just messing about.
My daughter just paid less for a house than the sellers paid themselves in 2005. But they were anxious to grab a bungalow that was being vacated by a lady going into care. I reckon they were first people I've ever dealt with who actually wanted to sell their house - most sellers seem like they're just messing about.
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