Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

City home sold at £100k over value

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Christened Tony and Don by the Scottish

SPCA officers who cared for them, the pair were discovered by members of the public within hours of each other last month.

They were cared for at the charity’s national wildlife rescue centre.

And following a full recovery, the puffins have now been released back into the wild at Elie

A near Broughty Ferry sold for £100,000 more than its home report value as the property market reached a frenzy last year.

Estate agent RSB Lindsays said the highest amount paid over the asking price was not one of the luxury properties it sold last year.

Instead it was a relatively modest bungalow, with a garage, valued at £230,000.

Its purchase price of £330,000 represents a 43% premium on its valuation.

The head of RSB Lindsay’s Dundee office, Chris Todd said the sale, in an unnamed street, was an example of bidding wars over sought-after properties.

He said: “We know that across Tayside, demand for homes outstrips the number of properties on the market. That adds an edge to the local market.

“People are willing to bid competitiv­ely in excess of the asking prices to get the homes they want.

“So long as that remains the case – with lenders continuing to make money available – prices will continue to rise, albeit not at the rate we have seen over the past 18 months or so.”

From its sales data, RSB Lindsays found housebuyer­s in Dundee paid an average of £10,000 more for homes in the past year.

The average price of homes it sold was £180,000, up from £170,000 in 2020, a rise of just under 6%.

Lindsays said demand across the board remained strong – even when compared to the explosion in activity witnessed after the market reopened in the final months of 2020 following the easing of restrictio­ns following the first Covid-19 lockdown.

Mr Todd said he expects the market to settle in 2022, predicting a 5% rise, adding: “We are confident that it will be busy.

“We know there are buyers ready to move off the mark quickly after the festive break.”

RSB Lindsays said demand remains high for homes outside of the city centre.

People are continuing to make lifestyle changes influenced by the Covid-19 pandemic.

More people are now looking for homes with gardens, partly influenced by a move to home working.

A study from Bank of Scotland shows house prices in Dundee rose more than 11% in the past year.

The bank’s research found the average home in Dundee costs £191,407, an increase of more than £19,000 from 2020.

 ?? ?? Chris Todd of RSB Lindsays.
Chris Todd of RSB Lindsays.

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