Tuesday, 25 March 2014

Tickle-International-Property Update 52


Another busy week with price reductions, withdrawals, sales and new listings.  I have once again included Over The Tracks in this weeks listings because at an asking price of only 60,000 Euros for a detached country house with 24,000 m2 of land in a convenient location it is an absolute steal! We have had a huge amount of interest and I am pleased to say that I have now put some photos on the site showing how the house looks now following the recent break in. I left the old photos on as well so you can see how it is and what it could be!

This house was originally on offer at over 230,000 Euros. A little expensive for the time of listing but not a lot. The owner then reduced the price over time but always behind the market so it was always just a little expensive for the time. It also got stale. Everyone had seen it, it had been for sale forever and everyone assumed there was something wrong. There wasn't but by the time the owner agreed to ask a realistic, "selling" price it was too late.The market response was "seen it, bored with it, must be something wrong".  There was nothing wrong when it went to 100,000 Euros but the recent break in (if you leave any house empty and unsecured for long enough someone will break in) has seen the owner finally wash his hands of it and set a rock bottom, never to be repeated price of 60,000 Euros.So if this is what you want, get in touch.

Another property that is troubling me is  Hedge Row Why hasn't it sold? I do not know why! It's a good house, great price, convenient location and ready to go. Surely people aren't being put off by a green pool? All comments and suggestions welcome! I really need help or an offer here.

Finally I should be in hospital next week for a hip replacement (my third - no jokes) so if I am a little slow replying to emails please bear with me.

http://www.tickle-international-property.com/
Email: bill.tickle@tickle-international-property.com

Thursday, 6 March 2014

A Special Stop


I got a reminder last week of one of the joys of Spain. I was driving up to France and approaching Burgos I remembered seeing an ancient town off to the right on previous trips. As it was pit stop time I turned off to take a quick look and was simply stunned. The town was Lerma and what I found was a truly magnificent old town with an enormous square surrounded by cloisters at it's heart. That was special enough but we wandered into a local bar which, with it's flagstoned floors and  low ceilings, could have been from a film set; the perfect Spanish bar! Better yet, this is wine making country and the locals were really testing the local vintage. Red, white and rose in the enormous glasses you see on TV dinner parties. However, instead of swirling a bit of wine around the bottom and sipping it, these glasses were filled, the wine was being quaffed and a great time was being had by all!

As a driver I took my coffee (although there was a terrible temptation to book a hotel room, forget the journey and join the party) and found a table. Shortly after the barmaid appeared "would we like some soup"? Of course we said yes and what we got in little pots was a concoction of chorizo and vegatebles that would put any of Mr Heinz' tins to shame.  Oh, and it was free!

So a toilet break on the motorway turned into an enervating and memorable experience and that is one of the joys of Spain: the ability to produce surprises and delights totally unexpectedly. I may not sell homes in Lerma but there are plenty of these experiences available where we do sell and it was wonderful to be reminded of what a special place Spain can be.


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Email: bill.tickle@tickle-international-property.com

+44 208 144 5525
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Saturday, 7 December 2013

Buy Interest Free Over 120 Months!

 Something new and very attractive this week! We have 2 properties available which can be bought in instalments. This isn't a mortgage and there is no interest charged. You simply pay the arrangement and legal fees upfront and then the agreed price of the property spread over 10 years in 120 equal monthly instalments. Ideal for anyone who doesn't have a lot of capital! 
 
The offer is open to all and there are no catches or exclusions. We only have 2 properties available on this basis so it will be first come, first served, but we will be looking for more!

If this idea appeals to you but today's properties are not what you are looking for then get in touch. Tell me what you want and your monthly budget and we will see what we can find! I can't make any promises because this deal is quite exceptional but our motto is "nothing ventured, nothing gained"!

http://www.tickle-international-property.com/
Email: bill.tickle@tickle-international-property.com

Thursday, 28 November 2013

Iznalloz, Granada, Andalucia;

The full service town with the cheap property!

Iznalloz is the main town of Los Montes Orientales, which comprises about 17 towns and villages spread over the north of the province of Granada.  As such it has a number of banks, small shops and a major supermarket as well as both primary and secondary schools and excellent sports facilities including a municipal swimming pool.

Public transport links are good with the town having a railway station connecting to Granada city and regular bus services  to a wide range of destinations either direct, or with a change in Granada or Jaen.

Motorway access is also good with the A44 motorway running just to the West of the town and connecting with Granada (25 min.), Malaga (1½ hours)  Jaen, Cordoba and Madrid. The nearest airports are in Granada and Malaga.

Iznalloz is a hill town with plenty of ups and downs and many houses are arranged on different levels so there can be street entrances on ground and upper stories!

Things to see include

16th century church of Ntra. Sra. de los Remedios (16th century) and the ruins of an old Moorish castle,

The Roman Bridge over the Cubillas River.

Castillo de los almendros, remains, including two towers, of a Moorish fortress.

Cueva del agua, a group of Jurassic caves where numerous findings from the stone age have been found


Fiestas

15 May is la Romería del Patrón de Iznalloz, with lots of decorated carts and stalls.

The penultimate week of August is the town fiesta, ostesibly in honour of the town's patron Nuestra Señora de los Remedios

Antes se celebraban del 31 de Agosto de al 4 Septiembre

Golf

There are 3 courses within easy reach with the nearest being about 15 minutes.

Skiing,

The ski station of the Sierra Nevada is about 45 minutes by car and provides accommodation, restaurants, equipment for purchase or hire, ski instruction and a variety of pistes.

Beach.

Salobrena is under the hour and is a beautiful old town that hasn't quite been spoiled by development. Good beach, several excellent restaurants.

We have a wide selection of homes for sale in the town. The recent recession saw all of the estate agents that serviced the area close and there are now a lot of eager sellers offering incredible bargains. See the town, enjoy the life and get yourself a bargain!

If you know Iznalloz and would like to add your comments please feel free to do so. Drop me a line anytime  all contributions welcome!


http://www.tickle-international-property.com/ 
Email: bill.tickle@tickle-international-property.com

+44 208 144 5525
Skype; Tickle.tip

Thursday, 7 November 2013

Valuations in Spain

I am often asked to value properties for owners looking to sell and I have to tell them that valuations in Spain are a very inexact science! I worked for a time as a valuer in the UK, many years ago, and when you sweep the smokescreen away it’s quite straight forward. In any street the houses are broadly similar so it’s easy to get an idea of what they are worth. If the average price is X any house will be worth x+ or x- depending on condition, facilities (new kitchen, bathrooms) and the garden size etc, etc. Add to this that even in a recession people are buying houses because everyone NEEDS somewhere to live.

 In Spain it is more difficult! No two houses are the same so you have little to compare them with, fashion makes a huge impact (this week everyone wants to be in Almeria, next week Granada is the chosen place). More importantly however is that a home in Spain for most people is a luxury purchase. They want one but they don’t have to have one. If they can’t get what they want in Spain they can go to Bulgaria, Cyprus, Greece or the USA or Brazil. Or they can simply stay in the UK.

 Most Spanish valuers doing mortgage valuations simply multiply the built area of the property by a building cost (say 1,000 Euros per m2). This gives some absolutely ridiculous results like the immaculately maintained country house with 8 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, pool, 5,000m2 land, views, easy access and all 35 minutes from Malaga airport that was valued at 165,000 Euros during a boom period!
 
At the end of the day whilst a formal valuation may be difficult common sense gives a general feel of correct pricing. And then it is down to negotiation! Buyers know what they can afford to pay, sellers what they can afford to take and the figure they come to is the only real valuation!


http://www.tickle-international-property.com/  
Email: bill.tickle@tickle-international-property.com
+44 208 144 5525
Skype; Tickle.tip

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Buying A Ruin?

There was a time when ruins were especially sought after by anyone planning to build a new home! In the good old days you looked for a pile of stones in the corner of as field and declared that you were going to do a reform and you built pretty well what you looked where you liked on the plot! The ruin was effectively a carte blanche to build what you liked. Those happy (?) days are long gone. As the Spanish authorities set about closing all the stable doors now all the horses have gone the rules on reforming have become extremely tight as they set about trying to "protect" the countryside.

The first thing to bear in mind is that there is no such thing as outline planning permission in Spain so a seller who indicates he has permission to develop must have a formally approved proyecto. Anything else including "promises" by the town hall or favourable comments by the mayor are simply worthless. You either have it or you don't!

The basic rule of thumb these days is that town halls don't want to approve of building in the campo so what they will accept as a reformable ruin is much more restricted. It will be expected to look like a building and have a roof for starters! In addition you will only be able to work within the existing footprint of the building; no fancy extensions and no moving the building to a spot with a better view!

Our advice these days therefore is to look at the type of property we call a "camper". Good enough to provide shelter , undeniably a house but in need to full reform and modernization. There should be few problems with getting permission in cases like this and I have included a few examples in the property update.

For those of you asking why buy a ruin or a camper  the answer is simple. It is an opportunity to create your own special home with your personal stamp well and truly on it! It is a chance to put in the amenities you want and use the finishes you like and ultimately if you do it right it is a sound investment.

If you are looking to create something personal get in touch. We always enjoy talking projects!
http://www.tickle-international-property.com/
Email: bill.tickle@tickle-international-property.com
+44 208 144 5525
Skype; Tickle.tip
 

Monday, 28 October 2013

Not All Land Is Equal

In an earlier newsletter I talked about how to negotiate for land in Spain but this week I want to talk about how the land market works.

All local authorities establish a minimum plot size to permit the building of a family home. This is in theory based on the amount of land needed to support a family. In a productive, well watered, area it could be 5,000 m2 but in areas of poor soil, climate and with a shortage of water the minimum plot allowed for the construction of a home is often 25,000 m2 and I have heard of 50,000 m2 being the minimum.

The significance of these figures is that pieces of land below this minimum amount cannot be separated or segregated from a larger plot. So whilst you might want a couple of hundred m2  for parking or a pool and the owner might be delighted to sell it to you he cannot legally do so.

In addition to not being able to sell less than the minimum build plot, ant segregation must ensure that  all the plots meet the minimum size. So in an area where 25,000 m2 is the minimum, if a seller has 45,000 m2 he cannot sell 25,000 m2 because the remaining plot will only be 20,000 m2.

Plots do exist legally below the minimum size because they pre date the current rules and these have no potential building value. As such they are (depending on productivity) an excellent buy for  agricultural or other purposes. Furthermore if you are able to put a couple of plots together you get a building plot and that has it's own value.

I am aware that in many areas, in response to the excesses of the boom, there is a total ban on any new building in the campo (countryside). How long that will last for I do not know but in the short term you should be extremely careful about buying to build as permission will be hard to impossible to obtain. However a buildable plot still has an additional "hope value" that derives from the fact that in Spain nothing is concrete or indefinite!

My biggest surprise by the way is the number of people who say they want lots of land without spelling out why! If you want to be self sufficient and grow your own 50,000 m2 of secano (dry) land is pretty pointless whereas 10,000 or even 5,000 will give you a better living. And with Spain being so mountainous there are plenty of huge plots where most of the land is steeply sloped and the actual usable amount is tiny.

The moral is that you can buy land, just be aware of the rules and think hard about what you want it for because not all land is equal.

http://www.tickle-international-property.com/
Email: bill.tickle@tickle-international-property.com

Buying Land - How To.

I am often asked by people looking at country houses in Spain if they can buy more land. The answer is always yes but there are ways and means of doing it!

The important thing is always to forget what happens in your own country and remember that "local rules" apply.  The biggest mistake made by most North Europeans have is that they want to do things fast! They want land and they let the world know about it. Our sense of urgency, of "must have" gives the locals the impression that you NEED their land and that consequently they can ask a ridiculous price for it. Unfortunately the crazy initial asking price won't come down either because  the Spanish work to a different time scale to North Europeans! You and I might assume that the price might come down over time but that isn't the way it works. The seller now knows you NEED his land (whether or not it is true) and he has the patience to wait for "his price" so it could stay high forever.

The secret in Spain is "softly, softly, catchee monkey". Buy your country house drop the hint that you could be interested if some land comes available at the right price and wait for it to come to you. It will come! And whatever you do, don't be too eager, don't show your true interest and be prepared to haggle and you will get your land! You will also get a lot of respect from your new neighbours!

http://www.tickle-international-property.com/
Email:   bill.tickle@tickle-international-property.com
Phone:  +44 208 144 5525
Skype: 
tickle.tip

Saturday, 2 March 2013

Getting a Bargain by Making an Offer!

I got this response to my latest weekly update and thought this would be a great excuse to blog again about making offers. It didn’t make me a cent but it’s lovely to know someone actually reads what I write!

Hello Bill
 I receive your emails on a regular basis and find them very informative, and full of common sense(a rare commodity these days).
I bought a property last year which followed the advice in your previous email and made a ridiculous offer, with the money in place to proceed and even the estate agent could not believe they accepted the offer it was that low.
I think what people fail to realise is that the majority of property is built with cement, of which the price is based on energy price. Energy prices will only continue to rise, no matter what the state of the economy. When new property eventually starts to get built new build costs will be so much higher, people will then realise how cheap some of these properties have been.
I am sorry I did not purchase a property through you, but I eventually bought in the Algarve.
Houses are selling in Spain! And not before time! Bargain hunters and investments are picking off the bargains; the must sell properties at unrepeatable prices where people NEED to sell NOW. So how do you get one of these bargains? The secret is to watch the market for the obvious deals and then move quickly. If you look a gift horse in the mouth someone else will beat you to it! So you need to have your finances in place, you need to be able to move quickly and you need to put your offer in the best way to make a seller accept it. After all when you get a bargain the seller may be grateful but it will also hurt!

I always say that we never know a sellers bottom line until he can smell the money! When a seller knows that an offer is serious and that a “yes” means he gets a deposit and a completion date, then we get his bottom line! It’s amazing how often people accept offers that they have assured us in advance are out of the question. So how do you get to this point? The answer, quite simply, is to make offers; nothing ventured, nothing gained and if you don’t ask you don’t get.

To get the best response however you have to do things the right way. We get an awful lot of offers that in today’s market are discounted by sellers. They fail because they don’t get the juices flowing or the pound/dollar/euro signs whirling in the sellers mind;

a.       Offers in principal; “I’m curious, would he take x”. Sorry, no one takes these seriously.

b.      “I have to sell my house in the UK, Germany, wherever”. No matter how you dress it up this doesn’t work either. Property markets are bad everywhere and if you are so sure your house will sell fast, then sell it and come back when you have the cash.

c.       “I need a mortgage”. This is the most depressing one of all. The banks in Spain just don’t want to lend so unless it’s a very low percentage loan don’t expect any seller to get too excited. There is a huge gap between an offer in principal and an offer of money.

d.      Subject to viewing. What’s the point?

You might think that in a depressed market buyers would be more amenable but the difference is that whereas in a boom market interested buyers really will sell their house in their home country quickly or you really will get a mortgage, now no one believes in these things. Put simply it’s a case of “I’ll believe it when I see it”!

This might seem a bit off putting; no one wants to get on a plane to view houses if they don’t think sellers will match their valuation. This I understand and we do try and prepare the way.


1.      If we know that a seller will consider offers in your price range, even if the asking price is much higher, we will suggest a viewing. On the site I do try and identify these houses by saying things like “open to offers” or “try an offer”.

2.      I will circulate all sellers with properties meeting your specification but out of your price range with details of your budget and ability to buy and ask if it is worth bringing you to view their property. In other words I am telling them you are serious and tempting them! If they say yes to a viewing it is an indication that there is some flexibility in their thinking and the chance that an offer will be accepted.

3.      We will talk to sellers in advance of a viewing to prepare them for the likely offer. They won’t like it but it gets them thinking.

OK, to the offer. In the United States all offers are written and are binding on the party that makes them until they are rejected by the other party. Personally I think this is an excellent system because part of preparing the offer is confirming the terms and conditions. It is the terms can often decide whether an offer is acceptable. So how do you make an offer to give you the best chance of it being accepted?

A.     You should ideally have viewed the property. If you don't want to view make it clear that this is not important to you.

B.     It must obviously include the price you are prepared to pay

C.     Include your timescale; when can you pay the holding deposit to get the property out of the market, the balance of the formal 10% deposit and complete? These dates will of course be subject to your lawyer confirming that title is perfect. A quick 10% is always welcome because that means the deal is done, but some sellers might prefer a longer completion time so they can arrange a new home etc. Being flexible on this can help get the best deal.

D.     Include your financial situation (the money is in your savings account, bank in Spain etc). The seller therefore knows you can perform.

E.      Confirm what your offer covers such as furniture etc.

F.      Less important, but if you have a Spanish bank account, lawyer and /or an NIE already drop them into the equation; it again shows how serious and organised you are.

G.     Let the seller know you are interested in other properties and set a time limit for a response.

Get it right and there has never been a better time to buy a home abroad. And remember that the best deals always involve sellers that NEED to sell, so when you are stealing that house and getting the deal of the century it’s good to know the other party is just as happy as you!

+44 208 144 5525
+598 424 80 563
SKYPE;  tickle.tip

Life in the Old Girl Yet?


The Andalucian property market is alive! It may not be booming or even in good health but the heart is still beating judging by the unusually large number of sold properties in the update this week. The message is clear; bargains are selling! For a while now I have been telling people of the rising level of interest in Spanish properties and we are now seeing the results. The give away bargains are being snapped up and I know a lot of people are going to regret that they didn't jump in when they had the chance. They will be remembering the old saying about “never look a gift horse in the mouth” and kicking themselves! Deals are being done that some people will be bragging to their grand children about.

Now I know I will get a response from the nay sayers telling me how many unsold homes there are in Spain, how bad the local economy is and how many houses the banks want shot of. They use this supposed information as an excuse to do nothing and stay out of the market. What they forget is that the great overhang of unsold property is the detritus of the last boom; poor quality property in over developed locations that only a bonus felled banker would ever have lent money on. What is selling are quality homes (at every price level) in desirable locations at rock bottom, eye wateringly low (for the seller), prices. For buyers the problem is that these bargains are all “one offs”. They can’t be replaced and in fact may start to disappear, sold or not, very soon. I have been seeing owners withdrawing their homes from sale in the expectation that the coming weeks and months will see a steady upward movement on prices.

The moral of the story is clear; if you see you dream home at a bargain price, buy it now. Wait and you will miss out. And if you can't see your dream home on my site feel free to tell me all about it. The guys are always pleased to go looking for something special for the client who knows what he or she wants.

http://www.tickle-international-property.com/
Email: bill.tickle@tickle-international-property.com
+44 208 144 5525
+598 424 80 563
SKYPE;  tickle.tip