Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Estate agent fees part exchanging
1 Answers
Yesterday my local estate agent came round to value the house and took the photos ready to market but i asked them to wait a couple of days as i had a couple of private buyers that i wanted to check with now that i had a definite price. I didn't sign anything with them either and haven't sent off my HIP pack.
Last night i went and viewed a house through the same agent which i really liked and when i told the seller that i hadn't quite put my house on the market he said that as he was eager to sell and as he was a builder, subject to agreeing a price would have my property in part exchange to speed the process up.
Am i correct in thinking i am under no obligation to the estate agent and would therefore not have to pay them any fees??
Many thanks
Last night i went and viewed a house through the same agent which i really liked and when i told the seller that i hadn't quite put my house on the market he said that as he was eager to sell and as he was a builder, subject to agreeing a price would have my property in part exchange to speed the process up.
Am i correct in thinking i am under no obligation to the estate agent and would therefore not have to pay them any fees??
Many thanks
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by nikkismithuk. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Once you have signed a contract with the estate agent for your sale, you are legally bound to pay fees if a buyer is found. You haven't signed anything so you don't owe them any commission. The way to avoid the situation you describe with private buyers is, up front, name them on the contract that you sign as being 'exclusions' to the contract - in other words, if you sold to one of the named private buyers, no commission would be paid. This is more common when one changes estate agent and a potential buyer has been introduced by the first agent who can't yet proceed but wants the house - they would be named as an exclusion to stop the vendor having to pay BOTH estate agents for introducing the same buyer.
However the builder is going to have to pay that estate agent the commission on the full sales value on the sale of his house to you - not the lower part-exchange figure.
I guess that you also know that you can't avoid Stamp Duty Land Tax by doing this (it probably wasn't your intention anyway) - it is still assessed on both purchases at their market value.
However the builder is going to have to pay that estate agent the commission on the full sales value on the sale of his house to you - not the lower part-exchange figure.
I guess that you also know that you can't avoid Stamp Duty Land Tax by doing this (it probably wasn't your intention anyway) - it is still assessed on both purchases at their market value.
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