Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Chat

Join the discussion and chat with other Mumsnetters about everyday life, relationships and parenting.

Am I devaluing the house?

68 replies

SofiaGracee · 17/03/2024 12:10

My partner and I just bought a five bedroom house. It was cheap and an absolute state and we’re renovating the entire property.

Upstairs (attic) has two bedrooms, one a good size and the other not so much. I want to turn that room into a bathroom with a feature bath (and have the bathroom downstairs with just a shower). Partner thinks losing a bedroom is crazy.

what’s not appealing.
5 bedrooms, 1 bathroom and ensuite
4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms and an ensuite

(Ensuite is in the master bedroom on the first floor)

OP posts:
Matobe · 17/03/2024 12:11

Second option 100%

Horsewhisperers · 17/03/2024 12:12

Unless you have a large family, most people would prefer more bathrooms as four bedrooms is usually enough.

aldjpandfleba · 17/03/2024 12:13

I suspect your partner is right, if you already have a bathroom and an en-suite (and a downstairs toilet??) I think a bedroom is likely more valuable than an additional bathroom, there is more versatility in it; bigger family, office, hobby room, etc etc. I would ask an estate agent for your area.

Of course it depends what the renovation is for, if it's for yourself and relatively long term, I would do what you want.

Interested in this thread?

Then you might like threads about this subject:

Hollyhead · 17/03/2024 12:14

I hate cleaning bathrooms and would prefer an extra bedroom for office/hobby space.

Holidaytime2024 · 17/03/2024 12:15

You already have 2 bathrooms which is more than enough. I agree with your husband that you're devaluing.

SofiaGracee · 17/03/2024 12:15

Hollyhead · 17/03/2024 12:14

I hate cleaning bathrooms and would prefer an extra bedroom for office/hobby space.

I’d quite like to put in a garden office - but that’s a long way off as I definitely couldn’t afford it now.

OP posts:
yomellamoHelly · 17/03/2024 12:16

Bathroom and ensuite ought to be plenty. Are you planning to stay there long term. What\s the size / ages of your dc?
(We have a bathroom and 2 shower rooms for our 5 bed. - 2 teenagers plus guests potentially)

SofiaGracee · 17/03/2024 12:17

Just adding the floor plan for reference.

Am I devaluing the house?
OP posts:
Mazuslongtoenail · 17/03/2024 12:18

We’re going to change the fifth bedroom to a large bathroom. It makes most sense for us as a family. Are you planning on staying in the house or selling it?

I’ve noticed there’s a lack of large houses with big rooms unless you have 5/6 bedrooms which not everyone wants. Some people have the money to buy a large house and want large, nice rooms but don’t necessarily need lots of bedrooms.

That being said, extra bedrooms do of course increase the value in most cases.

doppelgangermirror · 17/03/2024 12:18

It would depend for me how long I was planning to stay there. A short period as a stepping stone - keep the 'value' of the extra bedroom. Longer term - I'd configure the space in the best way for my family to live there.

Freakinfraser · 17/03/2024 12:19

How long are you staying for. It can be put back to a bedroom. If you’re only staying a few years don’t do it. If you’re staying for the foreseeable do it. Make it the home you want, not just about value/

ThreeB · 17/03/2024 12:20

What are the dimensions of that room? If it was possible, I think I would half it and have a shower room and a home office.
I'd definitely add some form of toilet facility up there to save traipsing downstairs in the middle of the night

BrieAndChilli · 17/03/2024 12:21

What’s the floor plans of the the other 2 floors? Often 3 story houses don’t have much extra room on the bottom floor so extra rooms upstairs are good for studies/teen hangouts etc

Candleabra · 17/03/2024 12:21

No dimensions on the plan so can’t judge scale, but can you add an en-suite to bedroom 4 or reconfigure the layout to include a bathroom for both bedrooms?
I do agree it’s good to have a bathroom (or at least a toilet) on the same floor as the bedroom. I would think twice about removing a bedroom completely,

Yazzado · 17/03/2024 12:22

This reply has been deleted

This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines.

Meadowfinch · 17/03/2024 12:27

Surely it depends on your family.

If you will have an au pair or an elderly relative to live with you, or a lodger, then turn it into a bathroom. That extra floor could earn you £750 a month tax free.

If you plan a lot of children or if you have a lot of house guests, then leave it as a bedroom.

SofiaGracee · 17/03/2024 12:29

The current bathroom is quite small. The plan is to knock it into one room and turn the WC room into a large shower. I just think it will look cramped with a bath in there too?

So hard to say whether it’s a long term home. I do want it to be, but I wouldn’t rule out moving if I got a better job.

Am I devaluing the house?
OP posts:
UsernameChangerRanger · 17/03/2024 12:30

If you're renovating to live in does it really matter about what future owners want? What do you want?

IvorTheEngineDriver · 17/03/2024 12:31

We bought a 5-bed that had been converted to a 4-bed. Doesn't seem to have made any difference to the price compared to other non-converted houses in the road.

PossumintheHouse · 17/03/2024 12:32

I’d much prefer to make bedroom five into a cosy den/chill out space. Potentially with an office corner. It offers future buyers so much more potential.

SofiaGracee · 17/03/2024 12:32

Meadowfinch · 17/03/2024 12:27

Surely it depends on your family.

If you will have an au pair or an elderly relative to live with you, or a lodger, then turn it into a bathroom. That extra floor could earn you £750 a month tax free.

If you plan a lot of children or if you have a lot of house guests, then leave it as a bedroom.

We currently don’t have children. I am pregnant with my first but it’s very early days. We’d like 3 but I say that as someone who’s not experienced parenthood yet - so we could easily change our minds.

OP posts:
SofiaGracee · 17/03/2024 12:32

IvorTheEngineDriver · 17/03/2024 12:31

We bought a 5-bed that had been converted to a 4-bed. Doesn't seem to have made any difference to the price compared to other non-converted houses in the road.

What was the fifth bedroom turned into?

OP posts:
sleepyscientist · 17/03/2024 12:36

We bought a 5 bedroom house to get the downstairs space so would have loved your idea. You could always market it as a 4/5bedroom 5th bedroom currently used as a bathroom if you come to sell.

RhubarbGingerJam · 17/03/2024 12:44

5 bedrooms, 1 bathroom and ensuite
4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms and an ensuite

I have family of five - we often have guest so 7 in house and have never wanted two bathrooms and an ensuite. We currently have a bathroom and downstairs shower room - toilets in both - works really well.

It probably does depend on bedroom proportions but office rather bathroom would IMO be more desirable. However it's your house and it needs to fit your lifestyle. I think 4 bed here add about 35K to house price as they are much rarer than 3 beds - 5 bed option and it's mostly a completely different type of house.

Next door extended for 4 like us and then put office in dormer loft conversation - they aren't selling it done up for them for their retirement but I don't think it would get much more than ours (4 bed) as their garden left is a small yard - so not a family friendly house IMO. 4 good sized bedrooms will probably be enough to sell house in future - though depends on the area's housing stock.

Usernameisnotavailable0 · 17/03/2024 12:46

I don't think 4/5 are useful as bedrooms while they dont have a toilet on the same floor.

I'd view them as hobby office space only. From the floorplan it looks like it's crying out for an ensuite and could be a lovely guest suite for future grand parents to use.

Swipe left for the next trending thread