Brittany Properties

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fourstardan

Original Poster:

5,461 posts

157 months

Tuesday 4th March
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I was watching Place in the Sun today in Brittany, 4 bed big old place, massive garden I thought it would be at least £250-290...I was shocked it was £112k!

Never been to Brittany but been to Normandy a lot and its nice enough.

Has anyone moved down there, is it as drab as the UK in winter? Im in no position to yet but may want a bolt hole!.

paddy1970

1,094 posts

122 months

Tuesday 4th March
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The region gets approximately 200 rainy days per year in some areas, particularly in the western parts. Brest, one of the main cities in western Brittany, is often cited as one of the rainiest places in France, receiving around 1200mm (47 inches) of rainfall annually.

This high rainfall is part of why the countryside is so lush and green....


omniflow

3,110 posts

164 months

Wednesday 5th March
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If you're contemplating buying somewhere in France, you need to study the French property market a hell of a lot more than you have already,

Even further south than Brittany, e.g. The Charente, it's brutally cold in winter.

France is littered with empty cheap old properties. The French don't want to live in them. French inheritance laws mean that many old properties have been split into parts, and those that aren't are often owned by several different people.

If you do buy somewhere old and then decide you need to sell, it could take years to sell and you'll be extremely lucky if you manage to break even. If you hang on to it, then you (or your wife) will encounter those same inheritance laws at some point in the future.

I'm not saying don't do it. But you need to go in with both eyes wide open.


fourstardan

Original Poster:

5,461 posts

157 months

Wednesday 5th March
quotequote all
omniflow said:
If you're contemplating buying somewhere in France, you need to study the French property market a hell of a lot more than you have already,

Even further south than Brittany, e.g. The Charente, it's brutally cold in winter.

France is littered with empty cheap old properties. The French don't want to live in them. French inheritance laws mean that many old properties have been split into parts, and those that aren't are often owned by several different people.

If you do buy somewhere old and then decide you need to sell, it could take years to sell and you'll be extremely lucky if you manage to break even. If you hang on to it, then you (or your wife) will encounter those same inheritance laws at some point in the future.

I'm not saying don't do it. But you need to go in with both eyes wide open.
I have no intention of buying a French property, it was just a too good to be true feeling and this sort of advice confirms it.


The charente was on today actually, looked nice, but then they don't go looking for properties in these places on TV when it isn't do they!



Mr Magooagain

11,528 posts

183 months

Wednesday 5th March
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fourstardan said:
omniflow said:
If you're contemplating buying somewhere in France, you need to study the French property market a hell of a lot more than you have already,

Even further south than Brittany, e.g. The Charente, it's brutally cold in winter.

France is littered with empty cheap old properties. The French don't want to live in them. French inheritance laws mean that many old properties have been split into parts, and those that aren't are often owned by several different people.

If you do buy somewhere old and then decide you need to sell, it could take years to sell and you'll be extremely lucky if you manage to break even. If you hang on to it, then you (or your wife) will encounter those same inheritance laws at some point in the future.

I'm not saying don't do it. But you need to go in with both eyes wide open.
I have no intention of buying a French property, it was just a too good to be true feeling and this sort of advice confirms it.


The charente was on today actually, looked nice, but then they don't go looking for properties in these places on TV when it isn't do they!
As for the Charente it is not brutally cold in the winters! we’ve had nothing worse than -5 on an odd morning. The cold spell around January and February is around -1 or 2 with fresh sunny days, this morning was zero with a tiny bit of frost on the car screen but a beautiful day here today and forecast tomorrow.
Now if you want some rain then yes! Especially this last five years or so. Snow is rare.

smifffymoto

4,968 posts

218 months

Thursday 6th March
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It might get cold in France but you have blue a sky for the most part.