Yorkshire Post - Property

Expert reveals the most difficult part of selling

- Alex Goldstein INDEPENDEN­T PROPERTY CONSULTANT IN YORKSHIRE AND LONDON www.alexgoldst­ein.co.uk,

01423 788377 If I asked you what the hardest part of selling your home was, I am going to guess that you will say getting everything to presentati­on standard, keeping the children’s toys tidy during the viewing process or choosing which offer to go with. But you’re wrong on all counts.

Taking photograph­s, creating a brochure and getting out to the market is straightfo­rward. Viewings and nursing offers out of buyers, again is relatively simple.

What you are forgetting is the point from when the memorandum of sale is issued and you go ‘Under Offer’. From this point onwards to exchange of contracts is the hardest I have known it after 20 years in the industry.

Currently, the conveyanci­ng process for the vast majority of transactio­ns, is taking anywhere between two and three months. Long gone are those heady days of getting to exchange in a mere four weeks. Everything takes so much longer nowadays and paranoia has stifled much of the process.

If we take a moment and think just how many collective hours of meetings, emails, phone calls, viewings, adverts etc all go into selling a home. At the end of it, the estate agent has carefully crafted a proposed deal, where both buyer and seller are happy.

This fragile infant of an agreement is now about to be released for the first time beyond the confines of the estate agency encampment, into the wilds of the conveyanci­ng landscape.

All of a sudden, various third parties now have to be involved in the process – lenders, mortgage valuers, building surveyors, various trades for quotes and two sets of solicitors.

Introduce large amounts of money, emotions and time into the mix and the results can be quite explosive if an agent isn’t on their game.

Perhaps one can now better understand why the relationsh­ip between conveyanci­ng solicitors, surveyors and estate agents can be so strained at times. After all, the estate agent only gets paid once the deal exchanges.

Everyone else gets paid regardless if the deal gets over the line or not. In one sentence, any of these third parties can squash a deal in its tracks.

This is why estate agents tend to give solicitors a hard time due to the lack of control when putting a sale in the hands of a solicitor who now is judge, jury and executione­r.

In this highly litigious world, solicitors and surveyors are understand­ably more concerned about getting something wrong and being sued in years to come.

Much to the frustratio­n of estate agents, who feel able to take a commercial and pragmatic viewpoint, these other profession­als want a more beltand-braces approach and to minimise any associated risk.

The problem with this, is that no property transactio­n comes without risk and the pros and cons should be weighed up.

However, matters are sometimes taken to the extreme. I had a mortgage lender insisting on a tree survey. There wasn’t a problem with this except it was the day before exchange, there were no trees anywhere nearby and the property was a flat.

Despite the bank being informed of this, they still wanted it, which was another cost to the buyer.

While one may think that selling a property is simply putting a buyer and seller together, unless their advisors agree, it isn’t going to happen without a lot of cajoling.

It is vital to ensure yours and your buyers’ conveyanci­ng solicitors are the best they can be and never skimp on this cost.

 ?? ?? HIRING: Never cut costs when it comes to conveyanci­ng solicitors. It pays to employ the best there is if you want to avoid delays and issues.
HIRING: Never cut costs when it comes to conveyanci­ng solicitors. It pays to employ the best there is if you want to avoid delays and issues.

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