x
By using this website, you agree to our use of cookies to enhance your experience.
Graham Awards

TODAY'S OTHER NEWS

Agents 'warn downsizers not to over-estimate property profit'

Older homeowners are unrealistic about how much money they will raise from downsizing, and estate agents are warning them to manage their expectations. 

That's the claim from an equity release referral service, Key Partnerships, in a survey it has conducted of estate agents across the country. 

The exercise revealed a growing number of agents seeing would-be vendors wanting to sell their property to downsize, with some 66 per cent of agencies reporting a rise in such enquiries over the past year. Most of the enquiries came from vendors aiming to clear outstanding mortgages or to actively release funds for their retirement. 

Advertisement

However, the equity release firm also claims agents are warning would-be sellers against overestimating how much they will make as a result of a sale; it says 72 per cent of estate agents say older homeowners have unrealistic expectations.

The major reason, it says, is a lack of suitable homes for downsizers which is forcing up prices of the properties to which they downsize.

Key’s research found 85 per cent of estate agents believe prices for suitable homes for downsizers such as bungalows, retirement homes and houses suitable for the less mobile are being pushed up by lack of supply.

The research found 42 per cent of agents regularly recommend equity release plans.

“Whilst as an estate agent selling houses is the major revenue driver, where the economics don’t work from downsizing, clients will simply withdraw their properties from sale. Agents who increasingly discuss equity release as a potential alternative are able to benefit from an additional revenue stream by referring potential clients to a specialist” says a spokesman for Key.

  • icon

    Hmmmmm, maybe. So how does equity release get an older person out of a rambling property with a large garden, all needing maintenance that they are too aged or poor to deal with and into a small modern serviced retirement home beside the sea or close to their successful children living in stockbroker belt? Don't think so.
    But otherwise I agree, many older vendors of tired, worn out houses in an area of low employment and values are rather stuck when they feel that they need to move to a McCarthy & Stone in Sandbanks so tell us that they need a higher figure in order to move.

  • icon

    selling a house for 250k and buying a flat for 150k seems an easy enough plan for those only weak in limb.

icon

Please login to comment

MovePal MovePal MovePal
sign up