You could assume the owners are mortgage free after 22.5 years. They could just as easily have remortgaged for €200k in the boom times to buy a villa in Bulgaria. Who knows?
Unless they re-mortgaged during the boom the don't have repayments and don't need to sell.
If I had a house on the market for €235k and someone came for a viewing and then offered €110k, I would be peeved off. If everyone did that, people selling their house would be inundated with people wanting to view. My budget is €200k but sure I will go and check out the €500k house and slap in a €200k bid for the craic. It's time wasting.
You want to buy the house, they want to sell it, it's all very simple. If your purchase price is not their minimum selling price than you don't get the property. Whether their asking price is over the price you are willing to pay or is overvalued is not relevant. They will only sell at a price they want to.
Then the prices are all not easily comparable. If you are looking at similar houses in an estate in Cork City - you can say one is out of line. But you can't say that about one off houses.I should have mentioned that this is in rural Munster. House prices are still dropping.
Well you can be quite sure that when you make a bid, they will suddenly have another bidder out of the blue.I'd say if it was a case of "...waiting an hour for the 46A, then two come at once..." they might see thru' it.
If I had a house on the market for €235k and someone came for a viewing and then offered €110k, I would be peeved off.
Then the prices are all not easily comparable. If you are looking at similar houses in an estate in Cork City - you can say one is out of line. But you can't say that about one off houses.
Well you can be quite sure that when you make a bid, they will suddenly have another bidder out of the blue.
Say, as you suggest, you have a house on the market for €235k. And I approached you and said, "we like the house, and we're interested in making an offer. But there's one thing I can't get my head around. We've viewed a few other houses in the area that are four and five bedroom, in the 1500 sq feet ballpark, on half acres. They're all outside the town a bit as well, and like this, they don't need much work; just cosmetic. They're all in-and-around €150k. I just dunno where the €235k is coming from.
I printed off a few from Daft...." etc etc.
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I don't consider it time wasting, I consider it negotiation. Are you seriously trying to tell me you've never negotiated a price on anything? I realise there are certain places where it's not on, and isn't going to work, and will be "time wasting", such as in a supermarket or in a bar, or in a "large multiple retailer".
But I always negotiate on certain classes of items:
I bought a jeep last year: a hard bargain and I didn't save much.
Furniture, both for my house (as a landlord) and where I'm currently renting: saved a packet.
Garden machinery: "we'll have a vat off sale next month, come back then".
That's just three that spring to mind, but in the right environment I'll always drop in "are you flexible on the price", and take it from there. I've never had a "no" response. The tightest I've got is "margins are tight".
Now that the recession is over they no longer harp on about how to save money on the radio, but a couple of years ago this was always one suggested on Marian Finucane and the like.
But what if they think this is the going rate? It may have been when they originally advertised it 2-and-a-half years ago. But (outside of Dublin) the market has continued to fall.
The going rate has dropped. (No speculation there!)
If you are right then they are clowning; if they are right then you are clowning. Either way one of you is clowning. I think you need a serious seller and a serious buyer to do a deal.What to do? Any opinions? I'm sure that if there was an estate agent selling it the asking price would be about €175k.
Before going to view the house today, I went thru' all the rural houses in the locality on Daft, of five bedroom houses, and of all those between 1200 and 1800 square feet.
Five bedrooms (6) ranged from €50k to €250, averaged €180k.
Similar square footage houses (13) ranged from €60k to €285k, averaged €170k.
Despite ignoring this disparity, I won't be putting in a bid, the house is just too pokey. Most rooms are on the small side. For example, there are five bedrooms: one "master bedroom" and four "box rooms". It would be nice to have more than one room with a double/queen/king bed.
Nothing jumped out as the reason it costs so much more.
It turns out that much of the wood, including doors, floors, cabinets, etc., was done by the man of the house. I'm certainly leaning towards the emotional attachment possibility.
When I asked about the BER, they didn't have one and didn't seem that bothered. I thought this was a requirement but maybe not.
You would be surprised at some people's attitudes to their homes.Why would you assume that someone who has had a house on the market for over two years, are unaware of current market conditions??? It is hard to imagine anyone would put a house on the market and then ignore newspaper article on the topic, every local sale and so on....
Before going to view the house today, .
I had assumed that you had actually seen the house.My wife and I are in the market for a house and we've seen one we fancy.
We like the house. It has five bedrooms and the area is 1,500 sq ft
You can save a lot of energy by viewing houses before you decide how much to bid as in most cases, you won't want to bid.
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