The hidden dangers of leasehold.
Discussed today on the BBC - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-38827661 Would a Mod please make the url clickable.
Comments
-
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-38827661
No need to be a Mod, K.
0 -
Many thanks Vic.
Strange that this is the only forum I use which does not automatically make a URL clickable. I aint going to faff about with something which the CC IT dept should have put right in the first place.
That is another issue needing to be fixed in this dreadful CC software.
Cheers ..........K
0 -
Strange that this is the only forum I use which does not automatically make a URL clickable. I aint going to faff about with something which the CC IT dept should have put right in the first place.
However, you seem to expect the unpaid mods to do the faffing for you. It is very quick and easy to do, and I for one will happily explain how, if required.
0 -
I was talking to a solicitor who deals in property recently and he had three 'golden rules' for buying a house:
Never buy a leasehold property.
Never buy a house without a mains drainage connection.
Never buy a property that requires access to be made over someone else's land.
I entirely agree with this advice.
If a property is leasehold, I would negotiate the freehold as part of the deal. If this isn't possible (for a reasonable price) then walk away.
0 -
As a keen watcher of Homes Under the Hammer - Leasehold doesn't seem to cause too many problems if handled intelligently and with awareness.
I wouldn't have lived in all the lovely places I have been if I had gone for the mains drainage one! I don't recall EVER having mains drains except in an army quarter. And various digs in London many years ago!
0 -
Its understandable that Flats are held on a leasehold basis but it more difficult to understand why houses would be unless sold of a shared equity basis. It would be nice to think that if the leaseholder wanted to sell the leasehold they should first have an obligation offer it to the house owner first.
David
0 -
That, I think, is making the assumption everyone can buy 100% of the equity of a house by a mortgage and therefore have a greater choice. My understanding is that some housing associations sell shared ownership houses on a leasehold basis. If that is the only way you can get on the property ladder you immediately have a far narrower choice of property.
David
0