HIPS packs - such different prices?
HIPS packs - such different prices?
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Discussion

AudiSport

Original Poster:

1,499 posts

238 months

Sunday 24th January 2010
quotequote all
We are putting out flat up for sale and I'm currently looking at HIPS packs. The prices range from £95 (online) and £250 through our agent. Naturally the £95 one seems more attractive, however is there anything I need to bare in mind?

Our Flat is a two bed within a large block or around 80 flats.


Thank you!

Nimbus

1,176 posts

250 months

Sunday 24th January 2010
quotequote all
nope, they are the same thing... bits of paper your buyer wont look at..

I got mine done with these people. http://www.hips4u.com

completed in less than 2 weeks, and they almost certainly use the same people to do the inspections that your agents hips people use.

You can probably get them done in less time now, last year you only had to 'start' getting a hip, in order to market your house, now its got to be finished, so theres a bit more pressure for a quick turnaround.

Don't think my buyer even read the hip, and the one on my new house was pretty much no help on any important issues.

AudiSport

Original Poster:

1,499 posts

238 months

Sunday 24th January 2010
quotequote all
Great info, thank you!

scenario8

7,548 posts

201 months

Sunday 24th January 2010
quotequote all
Look here for what a hip is

http://www.homeinformationpacks.gov.uk/

Please don't fall into the widely held belief that hips are solely intended for the attention of a potential buyer. The vast majority of your hip is provided for the benefit of your eventual buyer's solicitor. Whether or not the pack is of sufficient quality to be of use to this solicitor is questionable, as is whether the solicitor concerned is minded to pay any attention to it.

A good quality pack should enable your buyer's solicitor to produce a final contract more quickly by providing a basic contract and standard answers to standard questions earlier in the conveyancing process. Many packs are of such low quality (and of dubious legality) that many solicitors may choose to effectively ignore the pack and start from scratch. This can mean the conveyancing process takes a lot longer and can be a bit of a pain in the bum for the seller as they can't help feeling they've "already answered that".

If you consider what is legally bound to be included within a hip, especially one for a leasehold property, quite how a business can operate offering them at £95 I've no idea. Even £295 is probably unsustainable. At least it will be as and when this form of conveyancing is dropped within the next year or so...

Best of luck with your move.

fido

18,335 posts

277 months

Sunday 24th January 2010
quotequote all
I made up my own pack (for a freehold property) last year and the EPC alone was £100, so yep it does seem of dubious value to get one for £95.


Edited by fido on Sunday 24th January 16:27

wiggy001

6,984 posts

293 months

Sunday 24th January 2010
quotequote all
Get the cheapest you can, makes no difference. I used hips4U.com, no problems and very efficient.

andy43

12,465 posts

276 months

Sunday 24th January 2010
quotequote all
scenario8 said:
Look here for what a hip is

http://www.homeinformationpacks.gov.uk/


If you consider what is legally bound to be included within a hip, especially one for a leasehold property, quite how a business can operate offering them at £95 I've no idea. Even £295 is probably unsustainable. At least it will be as and when this form of conveyancing is dropped within the next year or so...
It cannot be done for £95, unless the provider does their own search and EPC. For nothing.
I'd *really* like to see a link to someone doing it for that price.
Also bear in mind no legal training is required for a HIP - you need more qualifications to flip burgers.
I'd guess a £95 HIP would go straight in the bin, and the buyer's solicitor would just start from scratch.

Mojooo

13,286 posts

202 months

Sunday 24th January 2010
quotequote all
ive found from hips that the peopel selling the house see them as a pain whereas peopel wanting to buy a house will complain if they are not there and want to see them

Nimbus

1,176 posts

250 months

Monday 25th January 2010
quotequote all
andy43 said:
I'd guess a £95 HIP would go straight in the bin, and the buyer's solicitor would just start from scratch.
and you dont think a £295+ hip would end up in the same place.

Any buyers solicitor is still going to repeat the searches themselves, they can charge you for them after all...

HIPs, great idea, poorly executed, and as a result, worth fk all.

Funk

27,260 posts

231 months

Monday 25th January 2010
quotequote all
If it's likely to go straight in the bin anyway, I'd be getting the cheapest one I could.

HIPs are a fking stupid idea.

whitechief

4,431 posts

217 months

Monday 25th January 2010
quotequote all

You need one to market, but as has been said they are a waste of time, so get the cheapest you can. By all accounts should the tories win the election they will be abolished.

Dr_Rick

1,703 posts

270 months

Monday 25th January 2010
quotequote all
Does anyone know of a firm that will do cheap HIPS for Scotland (we're a bit behind the times here). hips4u don't seem to have any Scottish local authorities and I'd rather spend as little as possible on this.

Dr Rick

rlw

3,541 posts

259 months

Monday 25th January 2010
quotequote all
Nimbus said:
andy43 said:
Any buyers solicitor is still going to repeat the searches themselves, they can charge you for them after all...
..only if they have paid for them and I suspect that 99.99% of solicitors will charge you at cost for any disbursements like this...

scenario8

7,548 posts

201 months

Monday 25th January 2010
quotequote all
whitechief said:
You need one to market, but as has been said they are a waste of time, so get the cheapest you can. By all accounts should the tories win the election they will be abolished.
For "abolished" read "replaced". The hip ultimately contains information that will have to be provided in order for a final contract to be drafted. This information will always have to be provided. It is still pretty unclear what the Conservatives intend to do to replace HIPs. They could, quite easily, revert to the pre-hips regulations. But then we'd all complain that the conveyancing process takes such a long time and that very little information is available up front. (Fair enough, you could easily argue that currently, but at least the wheels are in motion at the beginning of the process).

Rather than abolish hips I understand it is at least as likely that DMC will try to strengthen the concept of hips by removing the mandatory production of legal papers at the point of marketing, but simultaneously increasing the number of mandatory elements within a "pre exchange pack" (my words). It is possible this will go hand and hand with a liberalising of the conveyancing licencing regulations. So we can all look forward to Tesco and Matalan offering conveyancing.

If we thought RICS reacted badly to dropping the Home Condition Report from the original HIPS proposal (and suddenly appearing in the media every other night slagging off hips, despite having shown pretty broad support to them up to that point) how do we envisage solicitors might react to a further breaking up of their near monopoly?

I guess we'll see what the Conservatives finally come up with when they're ready. Don't hold your breath though hip-haters.

whitechief

4,431 posts

217 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
quotequote all
scenario8 said:
whitechief said:
You need one to market, but as has been said they are a waste of time, so get the cheapest you can. By all accounts should the tories win the election they will be abolished.
For "abolished" read "replaced". The hip ultimately contains information that will have to be provided in order for a final contract to be drafted. This information will always have to be provided. It is still pretty unclear what the Conservatives intend to do to replace HIPs. They could, quite easily, revert to the pre-hips regulations. But then we'd all complain that the conveyancing process takes such a long time and that very little information is available up front. (Fair enough, you could easily argue that currently, but at least the wheels are in motion at the beginning of the process).

Rather than abolish hips I understand it is at least as likely that DMC will try to strengthen the concept of hips by removing the mandatory production of legal papers at the point of marketing, but simultaneously increasing the number of mandatory elements within a "pre exchange pack" (my words). It is possible this will go hand and hand with a liberalising of the conveyancing licencing regulations. So we can all look forward to Tesco and Matalan offering conveyancing.

If we thought RICS reacted badly to dropping the Home Condition Report from the original HIPS proposal (and suddenly appearing in the media every other night slagging off hips, despite having shown pretty broad support to them up to that point) how do we envisage solicitors might react to a further breaking up of their near monopoly?

I guess we'll see what the Conservatives finally come up with when they're ready. Don't hold your breath though hip-haters.
Fair points, but it was during lunch with my MP that he said they would be abolished should they gain power.

scenario8

7,548 posts

201 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
quotequote all
whitechief said:
scenario8 said:
whitechief said:
You need one to market, but as has been said they are a waste of time, so get the cheapest you can. By all accounts should the tories win the election they will be abolished.
For "abolished" read "replaced". The hip ultimately contains information that will have to be provided in order for a final contract to be drafted. This information will always have to be provided. It is still pretty unclear what the Conservatives intend to do to replace HIPs. They could, quite easily, revert to the pre-hips regulations. But then we'd all complain that the conveyancing process takes such a long time and that very little information is available up front. (Fair enough, you could easily argue that currently, but at least the wheels are in motion at the beginning of the process).

Rather than abolish hips I understand it is at least as likely that DMC will try to strengthen the concept of hips by removing the mandatory production of legal papers at the point of marketing, but simultaneously increasing the number of mandatory elements within a "pre exchange pack" (my words). It is possible this will go hand and hand with a liberalising of the conveyancing licencing regulations. So we can all look forward to Tesco and Matalan offering conveyancing.

If we thought RICS reacted badly to dropping the Home Condition Report from the original HIPS proposal (and suddenly appearing in the media every other night slagging off hips, despite having shown pretty broad support to them up to that point) how do we envisage solicitors might react to a further breaking up of their near monopoly?

I guess we'll see what the Conservatives finally come up with when they're ready. Don't hold your breath though hip-haters.
Fair points, but it was during lunch with my MP that he said they would be abolished should they gain power.
No, you're quite right, it is their stated intention to end hips as they are currently legislated. What hasn't been made clear, well, to be honest, what hasn't even been alluded to much, is what they will replace them with. It will be very popular (and populist) to abolish hips and would fit nicely with the traditional Daily Mail type Conservative voting home owner. The tricky bit is what to do next...

edited cos of an even lower quality sentence than normal

Edited by scenario8 on Tuesday 26th January 00:13

andy43

12,465 posts

276 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
quotequote all
The only bit that must stay, due to Europe, is the energy performance certificate. Better to be done for the buyer, not the seller, then they may actually be interested in improving the property and saving some money.

The rest of the HIP has always been done by the buyers solicitors - searches and title documents etc.
Passing it onto the seller, so they can do it as cheap as they can, is not really useful.
It delays first marketing, and means everything is paid for twice, certainly if the house on for sale for a number of months.
A solicitor won't trust a search that's too old, been done by an unknown third party, or just one that smells funny. Their insurance policies won't let them. Can you imagine using a search that's three months old then finding planning for a bypass at the bottom of your garden was approved in the weeks between first marketing and your purchase? You'll sue your solicitor. So most searches now get done twice, at point of marketing, and at sale.
Oh, a bit of extra VAT and some search fee cash for the councils there Gordon, well done.

Oh, and just wait 'til Tesco do do sausage factory conveyancing rofl - you think moving house is stressful now?