Unit sellers ‘emotional’ after defying odds
It’s been a tough market of late for inner Sydney unit sellers but a pair of vendors got a welcome surprise when 11 bidders registered for their auction, landing them a bumper price.
It’s been a tough market of late for inner Sydney unit sellers but a pair of vendors got a welcome surprise when 11 bidders registered for their auction, landing them a bumper price.
COVID-19 is driving a permanent shift in how we are choosing our homes and reversing a previous trend that had defined the market for years, property mogul John McGrath reveals.
Outer pockets of Western Sydney and some once cheaper middle ring suburbs are on the brink of $1m average prices due to an unexpected spike in demand from buyers during the pandemic.
Homeowners can save up to $8900 a year by making one change to their home loans, new modelling shows – and a rising share of owners say they are planning to take advantage.
It’s been vacant for decades and intruders have used it for ‘contacting the dead’, but now a mysterious house on the north shore has returned to the spotlight after being listed for sale.
The window for buyers to get a bargain during COVID may be closing – plummeting stock levels have been putting the squeeze on buyers, resulting in some huge sales this weekend.
Onlookers at an inner west auction were left stunned after an uninhabitable house filled with hoarded junk sold for a whopping $3.41 million to a buyer who never even went inside.
Homeowners have been reselling properties they purchased a few years ago with an astonishing mark-up in some Sydney pockets, despite the coronavirus-led recession.
It’s been on reality TV shows like My Kitchen Rules and has a design inspired by Michelangelo and the film Gone with the Wind, but now one of Sydney’s largest houses is up for grabs.
A swingers club reported to have hosted “house party-style” group sex, with a little extra on Wednesdays and Saturdays, is offering a $44,000 a year proposition for potential buyers.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/journalists/aidan-devine/page/112