Jump to content

Recommended Posts

We've just had a valuation survey carried out on our property by our buyer's mortgage company and it's come back at ?110k under the estate agent's recommended asking price. It's not a case of overinflation as 3 estate agents valued it within ?30k of each other and we plumped for the middle figure. I know that mortgage companies are traditionally conservative but ?110k seems excessive to say the least. What's more the figure is not based on the property's structural condition - that's all totally fine - it's been based on the fact that it has no vehicular access.


Just wondering if anyone has had any similar experiences lately? And if so, what did you do about coming up with a solution?

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/23294-valuation-survey-advice-please/
Share on other sites

We have had this before - usually you can appeal a valuation through the agents / Mortgage Company but this will cost. When you have a situation where there is a lack of access / strange lease conditions / boundary rights etc this can skew a survey if the surveyor is not local or is unsure. Recently they are being very conservative having been burnt in the last bubble.


However that does seem a large difference. First thing I would do is go to the agents and ask if they have any comparable examples of properties similar to yours and sold in your area in the last few months - this will give you an indication of who is at fault - the agents or the surveyors.

Another thought - years ago we had a flat we couldnt sell due to a very strange lease. We got Foxtons on the case and they managed to get us a fairly good price and managed to get the conveyancing through fairly quickly. They are a pain in the a**e and you pay a lot for them but they did sell the flat.

One aspect of vehicular access is about fire-engines etc. Clearly if fire-engines cannot access a property the mortgage company's risk is much higher - although since they can (and do) require buildings insurance of their mortgagees their investment should be protected.


There may also be an issue of how they calculate the value of a property - if they assume a standard value based on size etc. and then reduce it by a fixed %age factor for non-access then they may not have factored in e.g. unique design (you say your property is a one-off) or even the fact that the estate-agents' valuations may already have factored in non-access, and then perhaps increased valuation over standard because of other positive aspects. Finding out how the estate agents valued it, and what they took into account, might be a starting point.


Lenders are anyway very nervy nowadays because of the poor lending decisions they made in the past.

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
  • Latest Discussions

    • Hi if anyone has one pm me cheers 
    • You can always check when they registered on the forum, if you are suspicious. But I recommended Aria, and it certainly wasn't my only post on here, and it was a genuine recommendation. ETA: And he didn't ask me to make it, to the best of my recollection. But even if he had, many local tradespeople ask people to post on here if they are happy with the work that has been done.
    • I am not a patient at this practice, but surely it is more sensible to have an initial  phone discussion, as often the GP wouldn't need to see someone face to face unless they actually needed to physically examine them? This then leaves the available face to face appointments for patients who need them. And if during  the phone call the GP felt you needed examining, then arrangements could be made for a face to face. If you feel your ailment is such that you will definitely need to be physically examined, can you not explain that to the receptionist?
    • Give Labour a chance, they've only been in government for a short time, and they inherited a mess! As regards the notice boards, to the best of my recollection they were originally intended as community notice boards, and certainly not for advertising local businesses (who would decide which businesses  should have the limited space on the boards, anyway?) East Dulwich may have become more gentrified since the boards were first introduced, but that surely doesn't mean they should now be completely  taken over for the benefit of  the "middle classes", to the exclusion of everybody else? As  NewWave says, surely these people have other ways to find out about groups and events of interest to them, which the "non middle classes" may not have access to, and even if they did may not be able to afford them. Several people including myself have complained to councillors about the state of the noticeboards in the past.  I think one of the issues is that they were originally maintained by local volunteers, who may have either moved out of the area or lost interest - or given up in despair when the boards were flypostered and/or vandalised. I completely  agree that the boards should be used for information about not for profit organisations in the area, but if regular maintenance can't be provided and/or they continue to be vandalised, then I think it would be better if they were removed altogether.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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