andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2019-06-02 08:54 am

Unreasonable worrying about home selling

We're on a deadline. Not a _specific_ deadline, but we've basically said "We're buying your house, as soon as our flat sells." And nobody expects it to happen in the first week, but they do expect it to happen in a reasonable amount of time.

I say "Nobody expected it to happen in the first week", but 5 people saw it last weekend and four of them were positive about it. One of them was really really positive about it. To the point of asking whether we were up for them making an offer (to which I said "of course").

And yet there have been no offers. And no notes of interest. And while I didn't expect it to sell instantly, I now have no idea what to expect. Because if people can be that visibly excited while looking at the flat, and not actually decide they want it, then I have no idea how excited someone actually needs to be to go for it.

I don't think we've priced it out of the market. It looks reasonably similar to others in its price bracket. I think we're just going to have to wait for things to happen.

But I do wish it didn't lead to me waking up at 6am stressing about it.
drplokta: (Default)

[personal profile] drplokta 2019-06-02 09:47 am (UTC)(link)
It’s not a matter of how visibly excited they are. In fact, the excited ones will probably disappear without a trace, and someone you’d written of as indifferent will end up making an offer.
franklanguage: My cat in a box (Tripod in box)

[personal profile] franklanguage 2019-06-02 11:12 am (UTC)(link)
This. Also, are you able to retain ownership and sublease it?

Don't know how it works in your country, but I work for several clients—some wealthy—and was surprised to find that even the wealthy ones don't always own their homes, they rent.
franklanguage: Man-in-the-moon belt buckle (moonbuckle)

[personal profile] franklanguage 2019-06-02 12:38 pm (UTC)(link)
That's what brokers are for.