Property division - what is the best way?

  • Erstellt am 2019-12-02 14:20:56

guckuck2

2019-12-03 17:32:04
  • #1
He can have the cream, but plus surveying costs and compensation for the devaluation of the remaining land. Or he simply buys everything and has to fillet it himself.
 

11ant

2019-12-03 17:41:56
  • #2

I think along these lines too: §1, outside there are only small pots; whoever wants individual cups outside, for them §2 applies: perverse costs extra (and this is not to be charged against the surcharge for cream).


With the absolute prices in C- and even less frequented locations, that could seriously be considered. Then wait for a speculation period, by then the market will be even drier, and use the monetization of the surface to serve a nice special repayment.
 

11ant

2019-12-03 18:01:24
  • #3
Of course, I have now found the old thread, - posts #12 and #18 contain the following images:

 

kaho674

2019-12-03 18:04:15
  • #4
I don't think they have the money. Anyone who moves to Hinterpupsdorf and builds with Town & Country doesn't have 40k left over for land speculation.
 

guckuck2

2019-12-03 18:09:04
  • #5
The advertisement states 29€/sqm for the total area. The price does not include any additional expenses and certain disadvantages such as the layout, the oversized area, and the slope are taken into account. If the interested party does not realize this, they probably will not be able to buy it.
 

11ant

2019-12-03 18:37:50
  • #6

The requester is not searching so desperately because he cannot finance an average price per square meter, but rather because the market offered nothing else before, right? – then his speculation is already financed by the particularly low price here:

80,000 EUR : 90 = 888 sqm – already a quite decent plot size; but he actually gets 2,765 sqm for the price. Then he has 1,877 sqm left, which he sells after the speculation period expires; certainly not for less than today’s 29 euros per square meter; that makes €54,433 (or 68% of the current land price), which he can then put down as a special repayment. He buys the land as a GbR with his wedded wife, I might say more in exchange for blue tiles.

His banker should understand the calculation. Of course, the land (purchase) taxes must be serviceable for the entire area, as well as local charges and cleaning fees etc. tralala until the resale.
 

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