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Tips for viewing a house

15 replies

FoxandDuck · Today 16:28

Our dream house has just come on the market and we are in the process of arranging a viewing next week. If we buy it, it will be our forever home which should work for the teen DC’s remaining school years, give sufficient space & flexibility for them to live with us in their 20s if they needed to and be somewhere we could live into our dotage. The combination of the purchase price and stamp duty means we’ll be stretching ourselves but in a way we can afford but what we can’t afford are any surprises. Or getting
it wrong and wanting to move again in a few years time.
Back when I rented my first house after leaving Uni, I failed to notice it didn’t have central heating. That was a chilly winter! Then there was the house opposite a pedestrian crossing and the bleep, bleep, bleep every time someone crossed the road. My first property was a good purchase but that was more by luck than any skill on our part. And then where we live now is fine but there are aspects of it that we didn’t pick up on (for example that the trees in a neighbouring garden would do something so surprising as growing or that another neighbour might chop down their hedge). We just walked in and, having been looking for six months, liked the location & space and so went for it. I’d say it was a head over heart decision as it’s a ugly house in a good location but, unlike various friends I’ve spoken to in the intervening years or various threads I’ve read on here, we didn’t have a list of long negotiables.
So, what should I have on that list? And what should I look out for?

OP posts:
Blimms · Today 16:31

Little things that I wished I’d checked on this house include the water pressure and the mobile phone signal.

MeetMeOnTheCorner · Today 16:42

I think aspect of house and garden if it’s not in the middle of a spacious plot. Upkeep of neighborhood. Possible alteration potential. Could you alter rooms for alternative use? What rooms are light and does anywhere seem pokey and dark? Storage. It’s needed. Non negotiable - more than one bathroom. Downstairs cloakroom is a must and somewhere for a very decent kitchen and good access to garden via kitchen and possibly lounge. Usable big garage.

thesandwich · Today 16:47

Just doing some viewings - we have asked chatgpt/ Claude for questions giving it the house spec. V helpful!

Nimblethimble · Today 16:48

Is it near a flood plain.

How strong is the wifi.

What are the neighbours like.

ohwhats · Today 17:05

Take a tape measure and measure the parts of the walls that are broken by doors. The plans don’t give you those and you will be using those walls to place furniture against too.
Make sure you have enough workable worktop space in the kitchen
Check which way the garden faces and where the sun will be.
Have a good look from the upstairs rooms into your neighbours gardens to see how well kept they are - an indication on whether they’ll be taking care of their homes.
Open kitchen cupboards to check how deep they are.

Treetopssofee · Today 17:10

Speed limit of the nearby roads and whether the main road near the house is near a junction

Once lived in a "quiet" rural house that was near a bad bend in the road. Bloodied shell-shocked callers to the door in the middle of the night happened more than once due to that bend, and when it happened it felt like living in a horror movie

Also loved near a crossroads in a town and heard a fatal crash from my bedroom. I can still replay it in my mind now.

I won't ever live on a corner, junction or bend on a 60 road ever again if I can help it

Gateappreciation · Today 17:14

Don’t they say that the first visit is with your heart, the second with your head. So the first, see whether you like the house, its location, layout, potential etc. on the second, you look around more forensically - see if there’s any damp, parking, storage, what needs replacing, decorating etc. Then visit the house at different times of the day to see how busy the road is, parking issues, noisy neighbours etc.

CombatBarbie · Today 17:15

Def check water pressure on all taps, ny ensuite is practically redundant because the water pressure on shower is crap. Only used for midnight wees, cleaning teeth and occasional bath.

Check WiFi speed online, just assume you are doing a new deal.

Detached or terraced? Is there right of access over the property is a semi on end of terrace?

Who owns the boundaries and what state are they in, trees?? There's an app that can show you where the sun will lie.

Is the kitchen stable as in all reasonably new or have they just put new doors on? Cour difference inside should be able to tell you.

MeetMeOnTheCorner · Today 17:18

Regarding water pressure - fit a pump or get water tank in the right place!

endash · Today 17:26

If it’s rural, check the drainage situation: is it on main drains, or does it have a septic tank? And if it’s the latter, has it recently been serviced/will you need to replace?

i also wish we’d checked the shower in the en suite - the drop is far too shallow, and it floods constantly. Not a dealbreaker, but it’s an expensive fix we’ve been putting off grumpily for 8 years. If the owners seem to be showering in the least convenient bathroom (as our vendor was) ask yourself why!

24Dogcuddler · Today 17:33

You can look at most things by examining a listing quite thoroughly especially to check for any deal breakers. You can also look at when it was last sold and the price. Look at nearby sold prices.

We moved last year and our FTB viewed 4 times! Looked in cupboards and wardrobes asked loads of questions ( including after they’d moved in)
We were downsizing and many properties we viewed needed lots of work inside and out. We asked questions about the heating, boiler, wiring, possibility of asbestos etc.

The one we bought we fell in love with, excellent plot. It was move in condition but dated so we renovated. We failed to notice no heat source in the kitchen, no extractor fan in the bathroom or that the floor was lifting in there. All showed up on the survey though.

If you don’t really know the area it’s worth a drive past or in the neighbourhood at different times of day, evenings and weekends.

Fallulah · Today 17:41

Second viewing is when you do all your measuring etc.

If there is any kind of side access/path, ask about ownership / rights of way.

If they’ve hidden their bins for viewings, where do these normally go?

Have a good look out of the upstairs windows - what do the neighbours’ places look like and are there any nearby trampolines?

Noise? What can you hear if you stand in the garden? What can you hear in the bedroom with the window shut?

When were the basic essentials installed/replaced? Boiler, double glazing etc.

Do a few drive bys at different times to see what’s going on.

Jennalong · Today 17:41

My friend viewed her house in the summer . When they moved in they discovered they had no hot water as the boiler was knackered . Check out the boiler , turn on the taps , go outside and look at the guttering and roof tiles to make sure none have slipped & look at the ridge tiles , look at the wiring if the house is older .

Iocanepowder · Today 17:43

Age of boiler

PeonyPassion · Today 17:46

Storage

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