Mortgages. Big Changes In The Buying And Selling Of Houses.
On June 1 st 2007, the law concerning the buying and selling of
houses changes. From that date onwards everyone who wants to
sell a house has firstly to prepare a Home Information Pack
(HIP).
And if you don't? You're in the frame for a £200 fine! It's
also probable that estate agents will also insist on you having
the Pack ready by the time they put your home on the market.
Certainly, buyers' solicitors won't do a thing until you
provide the Pack. All in all, you don't have an option – you'll
have to go along with the law.
So what has to go in the Pack?
The Government has yet to confirm the final details but at the
moment, it proposes that your Pack must include the following
information:
Search results from H.M. Land Registry
Replies to anticipated initial enquiries – these are the
currently raised by the buyer's solicitor
Copies of any planning, listed building and building
regulations consents and approvals. If you don't have these,
you'll need copies from your Local Planning Authority
And for new properties, copies of building warranties,
electrical test certificates, and any other warranties or
guarantees attaching to the property.
A draft sale contract
It is also proposed that the Pack should contain two items
currently obtained by the buyer:
A professional independent survey of the property called a Home
Condition Report. This is expected to be mid-level survey like
the current Homebuyer Survey and will offer far more
information than a lender's valuation report – but the
Government has yet to announce the details. However, it seems
likely that the Report will have to comment on the property's
state of repair, it's energy conservation efficiency, the
number and type of rooms and parking arrangements. Both buyers
and sellers will have a legal right to rely on this Report and
there'll be no need for buyers to obtain their own reports or
surveys. We expect lenders to make their own valuations as they
do now, but they'll want to maximise the use of the new Home
Condition Report to improve their valuations and cut costs to
consumers.
Replies to searches made of the Local Authority
In addition, if the property is leasehold:
A copy of the lease
The most recent service charge accounts and receipts
Details of the building's insurance and receipts for the
premiums paid.
And finally, any regulations made by the management company or
landlord
And how much is all this going to cost? The Government believes
that t he Pack is likely to cost sellers around £825 including
VAT. But they claim these are not additional costs.
The Government make the following points:
The HIP transfers responsibility for obtaining local searches
and a home condition report from the buyer to the seller. But
since most sellers are also buyers, the costs will usually be
balanced out by corresponding savings and benefits. We agree.
The Government also say that most sellers won't have to pay up
front for the pack. We very much doubt that. Someone is going
to have to pay and we doubt whether solicitors or estate agents
will pay upfront on behalf of the seller. The seller is going to
have to fork out as soon as the property is put up for sale.
Some commentators predict that this will act as a brake on
properties coming to the market. We think that it will dissuade
all but the committed sellers – those simply wanting to test the
market will probably back off. In practice this will be a good
thing, but we agree that it will reduce the amount of property
on the market.
The Government believes that market forces will keep down the
prices for preparing Home Condition Reports and Home
Information Packs. We aren't so confident about this. It very
much depends on how estate agents and solicitors adapt the
pricing within their fee structures. Expect some very creative
pricing, especially from estate agents! It's certainly going to
pay you to shop around for a good deal.
Every year around 30% of agreed house sales fall through. The
cost? At least £350 million each year! It's the Government's
hope that the Home Information Packs will greatly the numbers
falling through and avoid much of these wasted costs. We won't
argue against that but the National Association of Estate
Agents disagree with us.
They think the new Packs will simply shift the existing
problems from the middle of the selling process to the
beginning. Other commentators believe that HIPs will do nothing
to reduce gazumping or indeed, the tricks employed by some of
the less reputable estate agents.
Our general view is that if the packs help to identify problems
before everyone starts incurring cost and instructing
solicitors, then surely that's for the better? We say better to
have problems out in the open at the start than stumble upon
them half way through the selling process.
We just hope that all these changes in the buying and selling
houses don't result in a bureaucratic nightmare. Over 7,500
inspectors will be needed to carry out the new Home Condition
Reports and getting them all trained, qualified and registered
in time may yet prove to be that fly in the ointment!
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