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We visited for an additional viewing and measuring
before exchange as the owners were moving hundreds of miles away that weekend. It was handy for us as exchange and completion were 2 days apart in the end.0 -
Why can't it be taken at face value and they really just want to measure up?
We measured up prior to exchange so that we knew if we needed to buy curtains or if any of our existing ones would fit.
We had to do this BEFORE completing the fixtures and fittings form so was well before exchange.
As it happened, the vendor said on her F&F form she was leaving all her curtains so we left ours for our buyer. When we moved in she had taken the living room ones so we had to make do with sheets and blankets up at the windows for a bit!Ageing is a privilege not everyone gets.0 -
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They are looking for excuses to bail, without mentioning price, IMO.0
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Cheers Crashy, I was doing okay until your response but I'll just have a sleepless night.
Great.0 -
Exactly, so no point measuring before exchange because you can't order.
I can understand if you are looking at exchanging and completing very close to each other. But measuring before exchanging to me means "I want to make sure I am happy with my purchase", not "I need to take measurements before I move" because as you say, you won't order before you exchange anyway.
Let's say:
Exchange - Friday 18 August
Completion - Friday 1 Sept (2 weeks later)
Buyer - "Can I come and measure up on Sat 26 or Sun 27 please now that we've exchanged"
Seller - "Sorry we're away this weekend"
So nothing gets measured until you complete and move in. My main point is that a lot of things take a while to come once ordered. You also might choose to specify a delivery date. So if you need measurements to order something, view before exchange so you can literally order just after exchange as you may not be able to see the property again before completion once you've exchanged.goodwithsaving wrote: »Cheers Crashy, I was doing okay until your response but I'll just have a sleepless night.
Great.
gws - try not to worry - read a few of C's other posts and the subsequent replies to get the gist...
xx2023 wins: *must start comping again!*0 -
goodwithsaving wrote: »Cheers Crashy, I was doing okay until your response but I'll just have a sleepless night.
Great.
In my experience, I'd say that there's no way one can possibly know what's in a potential buyer's mind. I say that having had the sale of my last house fall through 3 times, so I have a little experience.
OK, it was an exceptionally hard time in which to be selling, but that aside, I just could not read their minds.
If it's any consolation, the people who did buy the house looked considerably less excited than any of the others.0 -
goodwithsaving wrote: »Cheers Crashy, I was doing okay until your response but I'll just have a sleepless night.
Great.
Best to ignore any of Crashy's "advice".
If someone offered £100,000 on Buckingham Palace he'd say you were offering too much and it's only worth the loose change and the piece of chewing gum in your coat pocket!Ageing is a privilege not everyone gets.0 -
Myself and my partner went to our sellers last week to measure up windows for curtains (we haven't exchanged yet but are very close). And we were just really excited to see the house we're buying. The nice thing is is that you get to be in it longer than the 10 mins you get walking around with an estate agent (not like it's the biggest purchase of your life or anything) and it gives you a chance to ask things that the estate agent couldn't answer, ie what are the neighbours like etc. I think it's a completely positive thing and it gives you more of a relationship with the sellers too which in our view makes us less worried that there would be any need for them to pull out of the sale that we so desperately want. So be positive about it ��0
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Clutterfree wrote: »Best to ignore any of Crashy's "advice".
If someone offered £100,000 on Buckingham Palace he'd say you were offering too much and it's only worth the loose change and the piece of chewing gum in your coat pocket!
That joke wasn`t particularly funny the first time IMO, we are talking about AVERAGE properties, not Buckingham Palace. Of course they probably thought prime sites could never lose their "value" in Japan in the early 90`s as well?0
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