Zoopla , what a load of rubbish
Discussion
LittleBigPlanet said:
In contrast to some of those posting in this thread, we used an online EA and it's been very fluid with minimal fuss.
We went from instruction to sale in eight days and paid £995 for the privilege (saving ~£3600).
However, it is possible that a good EA:We went from instruction to sale in eight days and paid £995 for the privilege (saving ~£3600).
1) could have cost you less than 5k with some negotiation
2) could have got a bidding war going - and gained you much more than the cost of the EA
Might suit a fast sale, but may not have go you the best price.
Vaud said:
LittleBigPlanet said:
In contrast to some of those posting in this thread, we used an online EA and it's been very fluid with minimal fuss.
We went from instruction to sale in eight days and paid £995 for the privilege (saving ~£3600).
However, it is possible that a good EA:We went from instruction to sale in eight days and paid £995 for the privilege (saving ~£3600).
1) could have cost you less than 5k with some negotiation
2) could have got a bidding war going - and gained you much more than the cost of the EA
Might suit a fast sale, but may not have go you the best price.
We didn't need an agent to take a few photos and put the property on Rightmove; the house sold itself. And we paid less for doing so! Win win.
That being said, and as I caveated above, if you have an unusual house or something that requires more attention then I'd go with a traditional EA over an online agent without hesitation.
Edited by LittleBigPlanet on Monday 27th November 19:55
Edited by LittleBigPlanet on Monday 27th November 19:56
smckeown said:
I have sold many properties way above the zoopla estimates price. Its just a guide. If your property looks a better proposition than the local competition it will sell irrelevant of the zoopla price
Sean
Not sure who this was in response to but if it was me then our EA valuations were above the Zoopla estimate and we sold even above their valuations. Sean
Guess it depends on the property/local market (and the fact that Zoopla estimates are exactly that).
FocusRS3 said:
I can’t see how the recently reported Brexit bill is now going to help the housing market .
90bln supposedly
I don't believe it to be remotely relevant to be honest. By far the most powerful mechanism in the conventional housing market is the Briton's ability to borrow money. Borrow to buy the house, borrow to furnish it and borrow to pay to the bills. The most vital question regarding the health of the market is how close the U.K. consumer is getting to not being able to borrow any more money whether secured or unsecured. 90bln supposedly
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