ChatterBank2 mins ago
Houses - Offering the asking price?
13 Answers
Hi,
Does anyone know in the current housing market what percentage under the asking price properties are going for?
I guess it varies from area to area - I've been advised that accepting an offer that's 3% under on a property worth £250k is reasonable.
Thanks in advance!
Does anyone know in the current housing market what percentage under the asking price properties are going for?
I guess it varies from area to area - I've been advised that accepting an offer that's 3% under on a property worth £250k is reasonable.
Thanks in advance!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by rogerab. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.the seller is the only one who can decide what they will accept. Plus someone offering 3% less but having no chain may be a better option than someone offering asking price but having to sell their own property.
the person looking to buy can offer whatever they want to.
The is no set rule for such a thing. Why have an asking price if you really only want to sell it for less?
the person looking to buy can offer whatever they want to.
The is no set rule for such a thing. Why have an asking price if you really only want to sell it for less?
Thanks both for your very quick feedback.
It's my property that I'm weighing up an accepting an offer on. Has been on the market for nearly 3 months. Only one offer so far (cash buyer with nothing to sell). Am being 'encouraged' by agent to accept in the absence of anything else.
Just trying to understand whether 3% under is absurd.
It's my property that I'm weighing up an accepting an offer on. Has been on the market for nearly 3 months. Only one offer so far (cash buyer with nothing to sell). Am being 'encouraged' by agent to accept in the absence of anything else.
Just trying to understand whether 3% under is absurd.
there is no norm,
i had a flat on at £85k (price by agent) i was offered £50k which i refused.
3 years later it finally sold at £50k after agent had me lowering the price every couple of months. My Agent was useless and i ended up with 3 years of having to pay for an empty property.
as said, only you can make decision. No-one know what prices will do, there are more mortgages on the market again now so the market should continue picking up i think.
i had a flat on at £85k (price by agent) i was offered £50k which i refused.
3 years later it finally sold at £50k after agent had me lowering the price every couple of months. My Agent was useless and i ended up with 3 years of having to pay for an empty property.
as said, only you can make decision. No-one know what prices will do, there are more mortgages on the market again now so the market should continue picking up i think.
its a game of numbers I'm afraid.. and the advice here - that its up to you - is probably the right angle...
If you were to ask me what I would do in the same position.. I would probably accept the offer - since there is no onward chain.. and that in itself really causes problems...
Depends how much you want to sell and move - or sit and wait!
Good Luck though!
If you were to ask me what I would do in the same position.. I would probably accept the offer - since there is no onward chain.. and that in itself really causes problems...
Depends how much you want to sell and move - or sit and wait!
Good Luck though!
With my 'sellers' hat on - accepting an offer now means that you are saving yourself 'x-amount' of additional mortgage payments whilst you wait for an offer to come in a little closer to your asking price........this could be pretty close to the shortfall.
With my 'buyers' hat on - making a lower offer saves money.I would also have a full structural survey carried out (not simply one by the mortgage company) and use that to drive down the price further should it flag up anything that would require me to spend money on after purchase.
With my 'buyers' hat on - making a lower offer saves money.I would also have a full structural survey carried out (not simply one by the mortgage company) and use that to drive down the price further should it flag up anything that would require me to spend money on after purchase.
Estate agents always suggest a higher figure to the seller to make the seller feel good. The suggested figure was for years 10% abve inflation and for years it became the norm resulting in the crazy world of rising house prices until the inevitable crash. House prices are still about 20% too high and no doubt will continue to fall until first time buyers can afford to buy. The last smaller crash in the 80s lasted about 8 years . So I think a positive offer of 3% under the asking price is well worth taking up.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.