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Property/DIY

School catchment or better area?

11 replies

Sparkles715 · 04/08/2020 14:48

I have my heart set on a particular secondary school for my DC. There isn’t much available close to the school. And definitely not much that I love that I can afford. There’s an area that is in catchment but isn’t as nice an area but the house is my ideal type of house. Or there’s a great house but just outside the catchment so a bit of a gamble for admissions.

Would you choose
House 1: very expensive for what it is (much smaller and in need of work) but walking distance to the school
House 2: my ideal sort of house and in the catchment but not in as nice an area
House 3: my ideal sort of house in a nice area but out of catchment
House 4: in catchment but an odd layout townhouse with kitchen in the middle floor

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sianyb83 · 04/08/2020 17:28

house 1- think about how much this will really benefit you...for example if you are doing school run on the way to work, the walking distance thing not that beneficial as you'd probably drop on your way to work in the car
Obviously if you don't drive or have younger sibling to think about this is a much bigger selling point!

house 2 - no, area is everything

house 3 - consider that catchment aren't always as rigid as they seem! My husband is head of an oversubscribed school, the sort of school people move to get into, we got a guaranteed place for our 5 yo last year - I found people were from all sort of random out of catchment areas...some had got in on appeal or waiting list

house 4 - sounds expensive and disruptive to put right

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Sparkles715 · 04/08/2020 18:30

Some years house 3 would get in but not every year. It’s a tight one!

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Lazypuppy · 04/08/2020 18:32

I'd go for house 4, kitchen on middle floor wouldn't bother me

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JoJoSM2 · 04/08/2020 18:36

How bad is the less nice area? I might consider if it’s just a bit less fancy but not if there’s something wrong with it, ie rundown or dodgy. Otherwise, I’d go with house 1 but I’m very particular about schools.

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TorkTorkBam · 04/08/2020 18:36

Location, location, location.

House 1 all the way.

When the children are in year 7, sell up and move to a house you prefer. It will be easy to sell a house in catchment of a good school. I wouldn't buy house 4 because a townhouse with an odd layout will be harder to sell.

House 1 needing work is a bonus. Do the minimum to make it seem a more attractive to buyers. See it as an investment of discomfort and DIY time for a couple of years to make a tidy profit, get the school you want and give you time to find your ideal home.

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user1487194234 · 04/08/2020 18:40

Catchment all the way

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Shadowboy · 04/08/2020 18:50

What’s the alternative school like? For me a good school is important- you can make a house a home but if the kids end up in a bad school it can affect their future.

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notheragain4 · 04/08/2020 20:37

Does being in catchment actually mean they will get into the school? We have one of the top performing secondaries in the country in our catchment area, but it's so oversubscribed not everyone gets in regardless of catchment.

I would check that first.

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Sparkles715 · 05/08/2020 09:13

@Shadowboy the alternative school is okay but nowhere near as good as the other one.

@notheragain4 within catchment have all got in in the last 10 years. Some from out of catchment get in but that distance can be minuscule depending on the year.

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Puffthemagicdragongoestobed · 05/08/2020 20:19

We just bought house 1. So far no regrets.

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Notthetoothfairy · 05/08/2020 20:26

I’m guessing it’s not needed for next month as too late for this year, so that gives you time. Maybe wait and see what else comes on the market.

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