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Offers in excess of...

11 replies

puggymummy1 · 18/06/2016 08:38

When you see a house with OIEO what does this mean to you? Do you think that the vendor doesn't want to mess about and wants to achieve that price or something else?

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ArgyMargy · 18/06/2016 08:45

Discourages stupid offers and encourages bidding premium. Fair enough.

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whois · 18/06/2016 08:48

I think it's fair enough - shows the minimum price they are willing to accept.

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wowfudge · 18/06/2016 10:03

Yes, it's the minimum price. I sold a house at oieo £90k and got £94 for it. One of the reasons for the pricing strategy was because of the bands on Rightmove.

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Postchildrenpregranny · 18/06/2016 10:05

No its ridiculous DD flat oieo X They accepted £10,000 less

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eurochick · 18/06/2016 10:06

It's BS in my experience. I bought an oiei places for quite a bit less than the supposed minimum price.

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StepAwayFromTheThesaurus · 18/06/2016 10:09

It depends on how realistic the OIEO price is really.

In my experience, it's like a little warning flag saying 'unreasonable vendor who think their house is worth much more than it is'. Because I only ever see it used around here on overpriced houses.

However, if the house were sensibly priced, I'd think that was what they wanted. I wouldn't offer more than the figure quoted generally though (unless there was a bidding war, but again OIEO doesn't seem to be applied to bidding war candidates around here).

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SpaghettiMeatballs · 18/06/2016 10:15

We sold using OIEO 2 years ago. The EA advised that we do this and I was really sceptical. She showed me data on Rightmove banding and convinced me to try.

We got £10k more than the OIEO price within a few weeks. The EA just told everyone viewing 'they will only accept OIEO' but the house was realistically priced so I dare say that had something to do with it working for us.

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TheGirlOnTheLanding · 18/06/2016 10:15

Seems pretty normal to me but that's because pretty much all houses up here are sold on this basis (Scotland) but it's fair because it's closed bids and everyone has access to the home report and valuation.

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sorenipples · 18/06/2016 13:14

In the East London market, I wasn't convinced it meant anything, just some words to got with a guide price that the vendor is hoping will be exceeded (and all vendors hoped their asking price will be exceeded). The market determines if that is the reality or not. Sometimes it indicated a unmotivated seller, who will only sell if they get a certain amount - normally you could spot these properties by condition and the fact they had been on the market for a while.

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puggymummy1 · 18/06/2016 13:45

So in summary, if the house is in great condition and the price is realistic and the OIEO price helps with Rightmove banding it should be acceptable and not off putting?

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Flossiesmummy · 18/06/2016 13:52

We've found it to mean absolutely nothing. Offer what you think the house is actually worth.

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