Owning your own home

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  • I like how you've done your path.

    "Distressed trip-hazard"

  • Briefly stopped to take a picture at one point

    #parquetlife

  • You mean the people in the house currently are nightmare neighbours?

  • The bin crews regularly refuse to empty their bins.

    Quite right if it's an AirBnB as the council doesn't collect commercial waste for free.

  • I know that house. We moved into a place just the other side of the railway that had been on the market for 6 months. Seemed sus but the neighbours are great, so I think it was the various other issues such as constant trains, subsidence and sitting tenants when viewing that were the problem.

  • How do prospective buyers know that though?

  • You scope out where you’re buying before putting down 700 large ones.

  • Do you tho?

    I mean we looked at the neighbours gardens and made a guess. For one house my OH immediately vetoed it due to the neighbour on one sides garden.

    But we really didn't vet the neighbours as much as we probably should have.

  • We did Drive bys at various times of the day and week to see how busy, noisy everything was.

  • We visited our house once, 200 miles away, seemed fine, luckily the neighbours are fine. Some friends of ours bought a place in Surrey, visited the house once, moved in, found out the guy 2 houses down likes to have garden parties for entire weekends non stop.

  • That's bloody lovely

  • We knocked on the neighbour's door with the pretence of asking them about the rest of the neighbourhood but really to check them out (their garden is a bit "unusual" so wanted to confirm that they weren't crazy).

  • We visited the house a second time, and were made to feel like it was a massive imposition by the EA.

    However, I wonder if that is a tacticsl to both reduce effort and reduce the risk of the buyer spotting something that puts them off.

  • Top tip right there!

  • Can't let that buyers remorse set in

  • Oddly that reminds me of a place I saw before moving to the sticks.
    It was top two floors in a town house with steps down to the garden which was 100% owned by the top two floors. The seller was there and she explained they let the downstairs neighbour use the garden and if I bought I’d have to do the same.
    There were 5 dogs in the garden next door too.
    Good one two deal breaker.

  • FT Article - Yikes! What should I do with my mortgage?

    Do not 'accept cookies' or it might boot you behind the paywall.

  • We knocked on the neighbour's door with the pretence of asking them about the rest of the neighbourhood but really to check them out (their garden is a bit "unusual" so wanted to confirm that they weren't crazy).

    I wondered why all these random people have been knocking on my door asking me about the local neighborhood.

  • Good reading.

    Tracker... (note that arrangement fees of £999 are broadly similar to fixes).

    This ^ is a good eg of why it's all down to personal circumstances and doing all the calculations. I can't recall exactly, but a mate was offered an insanely low 1yr, but once you actually added the fee in/out fees the 3yr was cheaper.

    Obviously if your monthly payments are high then a £k on fees might be negligible, but if they're lower then it changes the value proposition.

  • Incredible... it'd be totally up to you whether to let the downstairs neighbour continue to use the garden.

    We have a driveway and first floor used to use it, in agreement with our seller. We've landscaped it into a bit of a garden now, with a gate and fence across, so it can be used as a driveway when needed by family.

    Of course no one, at any point, stipulated that we had to continue to let the 1st floor use it.

  • I viewed the house I purchased a year ago for the grand total of 10 minutes, on one occasion, before buying it six months later. I walked past it just before we exchanged contracts and as it was still standing there I decided to go ahead.

  • For various reasons, I probably viewed the house I bought about a dozen times. Towards the end the estate agents were just happy to give me the keys for an hour (property was vacant which obviously made it a lot easier).

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Owning your own home

Posted by Avatar for Hobo @Hobo

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