Jump to content

Council offering to sell me flat


Bug

Recommended Posts

Dear all,


I own a flat which occupies the upper floor of a property. The flat below is owned by the council which, as the most recent tenant has left, the council have offered to sell to us (inc the freehold of the entire property). I expect to receive the council's valuation in the next few weeks.


Now, I doubt we could ever afford to buy it even if I wished to. But, I wondered whether anyone had experience of this kind of situation and whether there were any particular pitfalls that I should be aware of. Is buying from the council the same as buying privately - will the council massively over-value?


Thank you for looking at my very hypothetical situation.


Bug

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I thought it was more usual to sell them to existing tenants, not to someone who doesn't even live in it. If they do that they usually go to auction. It would certainly be worth owning the freehold. Have you lived there long and had to deal with the council as regards to repairs to the outside yet?
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Bug Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Dear all,

>

> I own a flat which occupies the upper floor of a

> property. The flat below is owned by the council

> which, as the most recent tenant has left, the

> council have offered to sell to us (inc the

> freehold of the entire property). I expect to

> receive the council's valuation in the next few

> weeks.

>

> Now, I doubt we could ever afford to buy it even

> if I wished to. But, I wondered whether anyone

> had experience of this kind of situation and

> whether there were any particular pitfalls that I

> should be aware of. Is buying from the council

> the same as buying privately - will the council

> massively over-value?

>

> Thank you for looking at my very hypothetical

> situation.

>

> Bug



I bought my grandmother's house in Kennington many years ago from the Council, they came in with a valuation, which I then negotiated down by ?17,000....


I would not accept the first price...I think they need money and it puts you in a good bargaining position.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think what has happened here is that the council have decided to sell the empty flat- and they own the freehold too. Under law they have to offer the freehold to other leaseholders first- they might mention the 1987 Housing Act? ie you get first stab at it. Try www.lease-advice.org to see if this sounds familiar. One of the reasons may be that the flat or the whold building needs a lot or work - think about things like services, asbestos- which an estate agent might not pick up on.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...