Showing posts with label sell apartments in gta 5 online. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sell apartments in gta 5 online. Show all posts

Sunday, January 21, 2018

Buying Property in Crete and Greece

Buy a house in greece crete



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live. However you may have only visited in the summer months, and you may be surprised to find that an attractive village


near a small resort, but far from town, becomes much less attractive in the winter months when everything in the nearby


resort is closed down.


considering to get a feel for the area and the people, or to give you time to discover other unknown locations before you


commit. Location is one of the most important considerations when buying a property abroad, particularly if you are moving


to live in Greece permanently.



  • How far are the nearest shops & tavernas for year-round living?



  • Accessibility of the property - steep tracks, steps etc may be a problem in the future.



  • What types of schools are in the area, if you have children.



  • How far are the nearest medical facilities / hospital, if this is important for you.


    Greece mainland, selling land and properties.


    and the price for the same property may vary considerably.


    If buying off plan compare companies, their finished properties and what the price includes. Don’t be rushed into a


    even put you in touch with English speaking lawyers. However beware! Your lawyer is the most important person in your


    Greek property purchase so you need to be confident that he/she will be looking out for your interests, and one


    recommended by the builder/estate agent will not always be the best option. An independent lawyer can be sought through


    the recommendations of friends or other third parties who have had similar dealings in Greek property purchase.


    check out the company; search online, read buyer reviews (preferably on independent sites, not on the company's own


    website) and ask to be put in touch with previous buyers for recommendations.


    around to 'supervise' the work being done you can appoint someone to do this for you, such as a lawyer or surveyor /


    Buying land / DIY building / Renovation


    costs are very often underestimated and you can easily end up spending much more than you anticipated.


    beneath old plaster. This will only become apparent when work starts and it is stripped away; knocking down whole walls


    may then be the only option and this may not have been costed in to a quote.


    to fall. Currently, in 2016/2017, there are bargains for be had but don't expect to make a quick profit if you are buying


    property as a short term investment.


    Resales are generally slow; Greeks often have their own family plot of land to build on while many expat buyers are troubled


    by the Greek economy and Greek bank mortgages have dried up.


    Remember that you will also need to recoup the high purchase costs of around 12 % (lawyers, estate agents, notary fees &


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  • Tuesday, January 16, 2018

    Rental apartment construction set to boom - The Globe and Mail

    Rental apartment construction set to boom Add to .


    The Globe and Mail


    Published Sunday, Sep. 08, 2013 7:00PM EDT


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    Last updated Sunday, Sep. 08, 2013 7:26PM EDT


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    Some of Canada’s biggest real estate owners, from pension funds to REITs to insurers, are showing more interest in developing new apartment buildings in major cities than they have in decades, a phenomenon that could change the way renters live.


    The emerging trend comes in the face of what industry players characterize as a near-perfect storm: The cost of buying older apartment buildings has jumped; financing for new construction is relatively inexpensive due to low interest rates; rental demand and rents are rising; fears of provincial rent control regimes are subsiding; condo markets are weakening; and institutional real estate owners are looking for places to park their money.


    “For the first time in generations it’s starting to make sense to build rental apartment buildings in big cities,” said Macquarie Securities analyst Michael Smith. “I think we’re in the early stages of a new era. If condo prices correct some more and mortgage rules get tougher, I see purpose-built rentals in big cities starting to fill the void.”


    Added to that are four rounds of tighter government mortgage insurance rules, while the country’s banking regulator is considering tightening mortgage lending rules for banks.


    “Every time Ottawa changes the mortgage rules and makes it tougher to buy a house or a condo, that’s going to push people into the rental market,” Mr. Smith said.


    In the past 20 to 25 years there has been a lack of new apartments, said Philip Fraser, the chief executive of Halifax-based Killam Properties Inc., a publicly traded company with apartments in five provinces.


    There has been some apartment construction in recent decades in smaller markets, but the major cities have, by and large, seen a dearth of new supply. In its place, condos owned by investors who obtain tenants have become the de facto new rental supply.


    “We’ve all basically been buying existing product,” said Mr. Fraser. “It’s just come to the tipping point where the lack of supply, increasing values, and increasing rents have us looking at ourselves and saying we are prepared to be a developer, and to build our own product.”


    Killam was among the first, and has recently been putting up apartment buildings in Newfoundland, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. “We just finished four of those projects,” Mr. Fraser says.


    Bentall Kennedy, which started as a small Canadian construction firm about a century ago and is now a major real estate services firm that advises pension funds and other institutional players, is also getting in on the game.


    “The purchase price for the older rental apartment buildings has become very dear, and so the return you get for these highly priced buildings makes one think about building rather than buying,” said Bentall CEO Gary Whitelaw. He added that rising interest rates and tighter underwriting rules are likely to cause some potential condo buyers to rent for longer. Having studied the idea for some time, “we’re now ready to get going,” he said.


    The company is in the process of finalizing the acquisition of a piece of land in Toronto for a rental project. It has just bought three sites in Calgary and has another project ready to go in Calgary that should break ground in six or seven months.


    “We’ve been looking actively in Vancouver,” Mr. Whitelaw added. “The price of land makes it very challenging, but again we think it has strong demand.”


    Derek Lobo, CEO of Rock Apartment Advisors Inc., notes that apartments are long-term investments, as opposed to new condo buildings in which the developer has generally washed his or her hands of it once the building is complete and the units are sold. The apartment business holds the risk that rents will not be as strong one or two decades down the road.


    Thomas Schwartz, the CEO of Canadian Apartment Properties Real Estate Investment Trust (Cap REIT), said that pressures on the condominium market should make it easier for apartment developers. “I think the condominium market is slowing down and that will bring lower land costs and certainly some lower construction costs,” he says.


    “We own apartments across Canada, and to date virtually everything we own we bought, we have not developed anything ourselves,” he said. “We’re starting to start to look.”


    “Rents are at a good level today. We’re seeing a very strong rental market in all the major cities in Canada – specifically Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal. Interest rates are, historically, very very low,” he says. “If construction and land costs come off a bit and if municipalities encouraged rental housing by taking away development charges, you may be able to make the equation work. And the industry would gear up and build some purpose-built rental housing for the first time probably in 25 years.”


    That could be a game changer for apartment dwellers. As Mr. Whitelaw notes, part of the reason it’s becoming more attractive to build than buy apartment buildings is that the existing stock was built 20, 30 or 40 years ago and requires a lot of expensive upgrading. “They’re often without washer and dryer on the same floor, let alone in the unit, and don’t have the same size or quality of finishes or amenity space,” he says.


    Landlords will increasingly be building apartment buildings that have those bells and whistles to appeal to tenants who might otherwise rent a condo.


    Follow Tara Perkins on Twitter: @taraperkins


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  • Friday, January 5, 2018

    Buying Property in Hong Kong, How To Buy a House in Hong Kong

    Hong Kong



    Financial Overview


    Property Search


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    Regional Statistics


    Surcharge has temporarily raised roundtrip buying costs in Hong Kong to discourage foreign buyers


    How high are realtors’ and lawyers’ fees in Hong Kong? What about other property purchase costs?


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    Transaction Costs


    How difficult is the property purchase process in Hong Kong?


    Foreigners, in general, can buy properties such as condominiums in Hong Kong and rent out without restriction. However, Hong Kong is not open to Afghans, Albanians, Cubans, North Koreans and Chinese from the mainland (unless they are permanent residents in another country).


    Go to the site


    However, buying land is a different story. St. John’s Cathedral is the only freehold property in Hong Kong. This exception aside, all other land belongs to the government, and land tenure is on a renewable leasehold basis. Land leases have in the past been granted for 75, 99, or 999 years, and at present are being granted for 50 years.


    Find the best real estate agents. Free service. Personal recommendations.


    Typically, the buyer pays a 5% of the purchase price as down payment when a preliminary sales and purchase agreement is signed. When a formal agreement is signed, he pays another 5%, and the rest of the balance is paid at closing, which can take six to eight weeks later.


    Footnotes to Transaction Costs Table


    Ad Valorem Stamp Duty (AVD) on Property Sales


    Ad valorem stamp duty is levied on sale or transfer of property in Hong Kong as of 23 February 2013, unless there are specific exemptions provided by the government.


    AD VALOREM STAMP DUTY (AVD) ON PROPERTY SALES


    The following stamp duty rates are applicable to residential properties acquired by Hong Kong permanent residents who do not have any other residential properties in Hong Kong when they acquired the property.


    STAMP DUTY ON PROPERTY SALES


    Over 20 million (US$2,577,320)


    Special Stamp Duty (SSD) on Residential Property Sales


    There is a special stamp duty that applies for residential property as of 20 November 2010, if it is resold within 24 months or 36 months. The applicable rate varies, depending on when the property was acquired and the holding period of the property before it was sold.


    SPECIAL STAMP DUTY FOR PROPERTIES ACQUIRED NOV 20 2010 TO 26 OCT 2012


    SPECIAL STAMP DUTY FOR PROPERTIES ACQUIRED 27 OCT 2012


    Solicitor’s fees are around 0.075% to 0.125% of property value.


    Registration Fee:


    Registration of assignment.


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    In order to promote open and spam-free conversations, Global Property Guide moderates commetns on all articles. You can expect that your comment will be published within 24 hours.


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    Wednesday, January 3, 2018

    Buying property in Paris, Housing, Expatica France

    Buying property in Paris


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    How to find the perfect property in Paris, whether you want to live in an apartment in Paris's city centre or find a house in the quieter Parisian suburbs.


    Paris has the largest number of English-speaking expats in France. The cost of living in Paris is high but you get a lot for your euros in this upmost cosmopolitan city, with its tree-lined boulevards, bistros, markets, shops and world-famous landmarks. Find out where to buy a house in Paris to make the best investment for your needs while living in France's exciting captial.


    Paris is still a good place to buy


    Find the best real estate agents. Free service. Personal recommendations.


    While property prices in most of France have fallen over the past few years, homes in Paris have continued to rise (an incredible 37 percent since 2009) – until now, according to financial news agency Bloomberg. As French president François Hollande introduces tax increases and cuts property subsidies, it looks as if property prices will fall – and continue to fall – in Paris. So while it might not be a great time to buy if you're looking for a quick return on your property, you might be able to bag yourself a bargain if you're lucky. Paris is always going to be a good place to buy property: "Prices in Paris won't collapse," says Bernard Cadeau, Chairman of Orpi, France's largest real estate agency "everybody in the world wants to buy in Paris." The scarcity of rented accommodation in the city means that you'll always be able to rent out your home.


    How much are properties in Paris?


    Property in Paris is sold (and priced) by the square metre. As a rough guide, an average one-bedroom apartment is about 30 square metres; something more palatial could be up to 500 square metres.



    If you're single or a couple without children then deciding where to live in Paris is probably a no brainer: you'll want to live in the city itself. But if you're coming to live here with your family, you might want to look outside the city limits, especially if you want to buy a house (although bear in mind that most bilingual/international schools will be in the city and immediate surroundings).

    Paris is divided into 20 different neighbourhoods called arrondissements, each with its own number, character and special features. Starting right in the centre, the first is situated on the right bank of the Seine around the Louvre. Each successive arrondissement is located in a clockwise spiral direction around the city, rather like a snail shell, and numbered consecutively – so the lowest numbers are the most central and the highest are the furthest out. For more information on each of the 20 arrondissements, see 'Where to live in Paris'. Unsurprisingly, the further away from the centre you go, the cheaper the property (although, like most cities, most districts in Paris have expensive and less expensive areas within them).


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    What can you buy in Paris's 20 arrondissements


    What little residential property there is amongst the museums and theatres in this most central of arrondissements is extremely elegant – think Rococo, Renaissance and Empire – and expensive. For example, an elegant apartment near the Place Vendome or Tuileriescan costs well over EUR 13,000 per square metre, although something on a busy road above the shops of the rue de Rivoli will be cheaper at around EUR 11,000 per square metre.


    This tiny but diverse area contains the Paris Stock Exchange, wholesale shops and hidden bars – and some pricey properties (over EUR 11,000 per square metre around the pedestrianised Montorgueil area or EUR 15,700 per square metre for a bijoux apartment on the rue Léopold-Bellan) and cheaper, less charming places along the large boulevards north of the rue de Clery at around EUR 7,000 per square metre .


    This is where you'll find the fashionable, buzzy Marais, centre of the city's gay and Jewish communities, and the very sought after (expensive) Ile St Louis. Tall wooden doors hide elegant courtyards and mansion apartments: the older parts in the south are more expensive. A small apartment on the desirable rue Vieille-du-Temple may cost up to EUR 14,750 per square metre; a ‘character' apartment in the area from the Hotel de Ville to St Paul will start at around EUR 10,800 per square metre. If this is too expensive, then look behind the Pompidou Centre or between Temple and the Place de le Republic for properties around EUR 8,500 per square metre. If you find an apartment needing renovation, you may be able to negotiate up to an 8 percent discount.


    The Latin Quarter may be full of students, with cheap cafes and bars, but the chic apartments in beautiful buildings cost a packet: around the Sorbonne and Pantheon are upwards of EUR 11,200 per square metre. Prices are a lot cheaper round the Gared'Austerlitz. Look out for Art Nouveau and Art Deco buildings in amongst the older properties.


    This area, with its narrow medieval streets, cool restaurants, bookshops, fashion houses, prestigious academic institutions and the Jardin du Luxembourg, is very fashionable and very expensive: a tiny (95 square metres) apartment overlooking the St-Sulpice church recently sold for EUR 2 million (EUR 21,000 per square metre). Most start between EUR 10,500 and 13,500 per square metre.


    A large apartment in a grand Art Nouveau or Art Deco block in this exclusive, aristocratic area may give you a view overlooking the Eiffel Tower or Les Invalides but will set you back a hefty EUR 15,000 per square metre.


    The best value places are to the north of the Gare St Lazare (if you're close to the tracks and don't mind the noise, you can pick something up for under EUR 6,500 per square metre). Apartments in the Golden Triangle (Champs-Elysées – Avenue Montaigne – Avenue George V) are at the other extreme. Architecture ranges from Renaissance, through 19th-century Haussmann to Art Deco and Post World War II.

    Prices average EUR 9,000 per square metre in this area – a mix of business and residential – including the upmarket Boulevard Haussmannand shops like Galeries Lafayette. Look to the slightly sleazier area to the north, closer to Pigalle and the red light district, and you can slash around EUR 1,500 off the square metre price. You'll find 18th-century apartment blocks called immeuble de rappor there in the 9th (and in some of the other arrondissements, too). Flat-fronted, they have small rectangular rooms (sometimes knocked into larger rooms), parquet floors, brick fireplaces and lowish ceilings.

    Despite urban renewal, the 10th still has run-down areas and a fair amount of crime (especially around the Gare du Nord and the Gare de l'Est), but that's why you'll pay around EUR 7,000 per square metre for an apartment here.The Canal St-Martin area has become very trendy – disused factories transformed into lofts, for example – with prices upwards of EUR 9,000 per square metre; add EUR 2,000 per square metre for a canal-side view.


    This area is densely populated with a mix of people: young singles, couples, gay, trendy, bourgeois, and poorer immigrants. There are parks and markets around the trendy Place de la Bastille and Place de la République (and apartments for around EUR 9,000 per square metre); and trendy, shops and restaurants around rue Oberkampf and rue Fauberg St Antoine. An apartment in a 1980s block with balcony and parking around the Père-Lachaise cemetery costs around EUR 10,000 per square metre.


    Primarily residential and popular with young families, the area has been regenerated in recent years. It has open spaces – Parc de Bercy and the vast park Bois de Vincennes – and trendy shops. You can expect prices to the north to be EUR 8,000+ per square metre, while further south a 1970s or 80s condo will be around EUR 7,000 per square metre.


    There's been lots of regeneration here too, with masses of (not very attractive) modern high rises and the city's main Chinatown area. Historic Butte aux Calles has cobbled streets and a villagey feel but is generally pricey, with 19th-century apartments between EUR 9,800 and 11,000 per square metre. Cheaper prices can be found in Tolbiac where 1960s–70s apartments with parking go for under EUR 8,500 per square metre. Cheaper still are the modern blocks on the outskirts of the city, priced around EUR 5,000 per square metre .


    This area, dominated by Montparnasse, is a residential area popular with UK and US expats. Around the beautiful Montsouris park there are streets lined with houses, not apartments, which is very unusual in Paris. Apartments in Montparnasse and Denfert-Rochereaucost are in the region of EUR 10,000 per square metre and upwards; prices get a lot cheaper the further south you go towards the périphérique – around Porte de Choicy, or Porte d'Ivry you can pick up something modern between EUR 5,000 and 7,500 per square metre.



    Another densely populated areas of Paris, this solid residential area hasn't got much in the way of nightlife or culture – but it does have some of Paris' most prestigious schools, some of which are bilingual. Property gets more expensive (and more attractive: Art Deco and Nouveau, Haussmann) the closer you get to the elegant 6th and 7th. Further south, closer to the périphérique, property is less prestigious but much cheaper. The average price for the area is just over EUR 9,000 per square metre.


    This is a very affluent, leafy, safe and conservative residential area popular with (wealthy) families, with several museums and the vast Bois de Boulogne (a park twice the size of Central Park). The average price here is just over EUR 10,175 per square metre. As well as period and modern apartments, there are lots of private hôtels particuliers, some still occupied by single families, and some gated, single-family mansions.


    In the north west of the city, what was once a rough working-class area has now become fashionable amongst the young. While the average price is around EUR 8,000 per square metre, prices rise around the villagey Place St Ferdinand, Parc Monceau and rue De Prony, but drop very substantially around La Fourche in the north. Foreigners like the area around the Arc de Triomphe/Ternes for its central location.


    This area contains Montmartre (and the Sacré Cœur) with its truly breath-taking views across the city (and some breath-taking prices to match: EUR 11,500 per square metre at the top end). While some parts are a bit touristy, there are lots of quiet, leafy little back streets. Property gets cheaper in La Goutte d'Or and La Chapell, giving an overall average property price of just over EUR 7,000 per square metre.The 18th is also the African/North African district, with the famous Barbès market.



    A large arrondissement with a couple of nice parks (one containing the city's science museum) but generally rather run down. Property sells at an average price of EUR 5,000 per square metre here, but while you may bag yourself a bargain, make sure that you'll feel comfortable living here, as some parts of the district are quite rough.


    This somewhat deprived but increasingly mixed area also has cheaper property (and one of the loveliest parks). With property selling at an average price of around EUR 6,600 per square metre – and as low as EUR 3,000 per square metre in some parts – the bargain prices have recently attracted a youngish, cosmopolitan crowd here, so it's a vibrant place.


    While there are over 3,500 agents immobilièrs (estate agents) in Paris, almost all of them operate completely independently without any co-operation (with the exception of a couple of companies like Orpi), and there are almost no multi-agent agreements. It's also been estimated that about half of all Parisian property is sold direct by the owners. So property hunting can be a bit of a nightmare, which is why many people choose to use property finders.


    Property tends to move fast in Paris: sometimes a property is sold the same day it goes on the market. Once you find a place you like, you may have to act fast. So:



    • Do your research into the different arrondissements and know what the price per metre is for that area.

    • Make sure you know what you're after at the outset.

    • Remember that making an offer is legally binding (see our guide to buying property in France).

    • Have your finances sorted (get a French bank account).





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    1 Comment To This Article


    Misha posted:


    I used the services of property finders. It was way easier to find, and cheaper.


    I now live rue des Saint Dres! Thanks to the team! www.daudruy-associates.com


    Leave a Reply


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