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The French Property Network

Oct 9

Thinking of Borrowing to buy your dream home?

We are seeing an increasing number of clients realise their French Property purchase by borrowing a small or larger amount to top up their 'cash' and buy the house of their dreams.

We have 3 distinct options to enable people to do this so take a look at our mortgage partners who will be happy to chat with you, on a no obligation basis of course.

The quickest and easiest way to contact each of our partners for more information is on the Cle France website following these links:

U.K Mortgages / loans:

http://www.clefrance.co.uk/index.php/clubclefrance/stag-mortgages

Speak to Tim for a no-nonsense approach.

 

English speaking French Mortgage Broker:

http://www.clefrance.co.uk/index.php/clubclefrance/mortgages-cafpi

Speak to Kathleen our English speaking partner in France.

 

International Mortgage Broker:

http://www.clefrance.co.uk/index.php/clubclefrance/ipf-mortgages

Speak to John, Russell or Simon for impartial advice.

Blog submitted by: Sharon at Cle France.

Add CommentViews: 2298
Oct 9

Going it alone with a Property search, is it worth it?

Sharon Evans looks at the pros and cons of buying French property privately as opposed to the more traditional route via an estate agent

In the UK, sales between private individuals, without the involvement of an estate agent, are not commonplace. True there are a number of websites nowadays enabling sellers to advertise their property direct to potential buyers, but the vast majority of us still use the services of an estate agent when buying or selling a property.

In France, however, private sales, usually referred to as ‘entre particuliers’, are common. They tend to be favoured by the more mature buyer, who perhaps has experience of buying and selling, and who therefore knows how things work and what to expect from the legal process.

The younger generation tends to favour buying through a local agent, as do those who are new to an area, where they are unsure of local property values. But for a well-informed buyer, the idea of potentially saving himself the cost of the agency fee is appealing.

Agency fees.

As you will no doubt have seen while browsing various internet portals, properties are offered either as an agency sale or a private sale, and so inevitably I am often asked by clients, what are the benefits and disadvantages of buying through an agent as opposed to buying direct from a private seller?

Agency commissions are usually included in the price of a property, which you will see in the agency window as ‘FAI’ (frais d’agence inclus), and a French agent is obliged to display his fee tariff in a prominent position in his office, so that the buyer is clear as to how much commission the agent will earn from the sale.

These vary according to the selling price and the individual agent, some starting as low as 3% going up to around 10% (the commission on a €30,000 property for instance will usually be a higher percentage of the selling price than that due on a €800,000 château). Typically on a €100,000 property, you might expect an agency fee in the region of €6,000-7,000.

That’s not an insignificant amount of money and in these straitened times, it’s easy to see why some buyers might feel it to be a saving well worth making. Generally, when UK buyers consider whether or not to buy privately, the issue of agency commission is uppermost in their minds. So it’s fair to say that when people ask me the question about whether to buy privately or through an agent, what they really want to know is what does the agent do for this commission, and how will it benefit me?

There is no question that for a UK-based buyer, perhaps with limited French and unfamiliar with how the French buying system operates, buying through an agent will provide that extra level of support, as they guide you through the sales process. A good agent will be able to keep you informed as to the progress of the sale, and when it comes to completion day they should accompany you to the notaire’s office for the signing of the acte de vente.

It is probably worth pointing out here that there are no hidden fees or charges for our service ie. buying through Clé France. The price you pay is the same as anyone walking through the door of the agency, and therefore the same as the price paid by the French buyer. Estate agents (Immobilier) and notaires in France are obliged by law to display there commission rates promenently in their office. We are able to offer you this service because our network of agents and notaires share there commission with us.

So when you buy through Clé France you can be confident that you are paying no more than the standard commission rates you would pay anyway, but you have the added benefit of a bi-lingual support team.

Little extras.

Once the sale is complete, they will arrange for the transfer of all utilities in your name, and will be able to help you with setting up bank accounts. These little extras are not an obligation on the part of an agent in France, but good ones perform these services as a matter of course, and importantly at no extra charge.

As you would expect, legal documentation will be in French, but agents who are used to dealing with English-speaking clients may well provide English versions of the first sales contract (compromis de vente). The notaire will usually conduct the sale and relative paperwork in French, but again, the agent may well translate for you on sale day, or provide a locally based translator to attend.

However, it should be noted that estate agents are not translators by profession, and at the critical contract stages of the process, it may be of benefit to hire a professional translator to assist.

Valuable contacts.

Many French agents are born and bred in the area in which they work, and their network of contacts will be truly invaluable. Your estate agent will probably be your first contact in France, and I believe potentially the most valuable.

He or she will be a mine of information, and throughout your dealings, a good agent will be able to advise on a whole range of matters that are not within their immediate remit, such as local tradespeople, issues around planning matters, and possibly even local schools and health.

These are clearly some of the practical benefits of buying through a good local agent. However, there is a further aspect to the private sale market in France that is worth a mention, and that is the matter of property valuation.

A French agent, who will be primarily selling properties for French owners to French buyers, will have a clear idea of the property market in their local area, and the correct valuation of any given property.

It is sometimes the case that owners who take the step of privately marketing their property do so as they don’t like the agent’s valuation, believing it to be too low. Indeed it is generally thought that privately advertised properties are some 20% more expensive than those listed by agents.

In my own company we are often approached directly by private sellers wishing to market their property on our site. I refer such enquiries to our local agent on the ground in France, who would then mandate the property for sale in the normal way, at which point it would come on to our site. Some time ago I was approached by a gentleman selling his home near Alencon. I suggested that he speak to my associate in the area who would do all the necessary, but when he knew who the agent was, he immediately rejected the idea, saying that he had no wish to do business with that particular individual.

Market values.

I was curious to say the least! My colleague is always very charming and an ardent Anglophile. I couldn’t imagine what he had done to cause such offence! It later transpired that the seller had already invited my colleague to mandate the property some six months previously. He had expressed his view that this was a very beautiful property, and that it should be marketed somewhere around the €230,000 mark. The seller wanted me to put it on our site at €500,000.

That is not to say that every private listing is overvalued. It is simply to say that if you are buying in a market that is unfamiliar, a good agent will be able to guide you as to the relative value of one property versus another, and importantly show you a number of different properties for comparison. He will also possibly be in a position to guide you as to the vendor’s position and attitude to negotiating.

As I said previously, buying privately is very commonplace in France, and UK buyers should absolutely have access to the same choice of available property as the French. I myself have bought and sold a few of my own properties privately in France in the past, without any problems.

British sellers who are accustomed to a more aggressive style of marketing in their own country sometimes find the French way of doing business a little frustrating, and if their language skills aren’t great, feel intimidated at approaching a local agent. So selling privately looks like a good option.

However, if as a seller you want to go down this route, don’t underestimate the cost of marketing, which can be considerable, especially if your property is on the market for any length of time.

For the buyer who has a good understanding of local market conditions and prices, buying privately can be an alternative. If a property is priced correctly, you could indeed save some money (and bear in mind for comparison that a privately advertised property should therefore be a little cheaper than its agency counterpart, to take account of the agency price including agency fees).

The other critical factor will be your language skills: are they of a sufficiently high level to read and correctly understand the process of buying and selling? If not, you will probably want to hire a translator for the documentation as well as for your liaison with the notaire.

There is a lot of information available nowadays, and some people feel sufficiently well researched to go through the process unaided.

Sharon Evans is director of Clé France

Tel: 01371 811799

Blog submitted by: Original article featured in Living France.

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Oct 8

Why I love the city of Lisieux

Let us take a look at the interesting and historic city of Lisieux in Pays d'Auge area of Calvados, Lower Normandy. 

Lisieux is only 30 to 40 minutes from the ports of Caen and Le Harve, it is the main town of the Pays d'Auge (more on this later) in the department of Calvados in the region of Lower Normandy and it is a good place to get to know a little about French cheeses and ciders. There are large street markets on Wednesdays and Saturdays where you can buy anything from French cheese to French clothes.

A lot of people, however, come to Lisieux as a place of pilgrimage based around the cult of St Thérèse, the most popular French spiritual figure of the last hundred years. Passivity, self-effacement and a self-denial that verged on masochism were her trademarks, and she is honoured by the gaudy and gigantic Basilique de Ste-Thérèse, completed in 1954 on a slope to the southwest of the town centre. The huge modern mosaics that decorate the nave are undeniably impressive. The faithful and tourists alike can ride on a "petit train" around the holiest sites, which include the restrained, by comparison to the basilique, Cathédrale St-Pierre.

Properties in and around Lisieux that are generally in high demand are the traditionally constructed stone or colombage (half-timbered) styles. Other styles are readily available at a better price as the colombage properties tend to demand a higher price but you get a lot of charm and property for your money.

Basilica of Sainte-Thérèse de Lisieux.

The Basilica of Sainte-Thérèse de Lisieux was constructed in honour of Sainte-Thérèse de Lisieux, who was beatified in 1923 and canonized in 1925. It was built for pilgrims who came in increasing numbers to venerate the new saint in the town where she had lived and died.

Château de Saint-Germain-de-Livet.

As its name indicates, the Château de Saint-Germain-de-Livet is situated in the commune of Saint-Germain-de-Livet. It is to be found opposite the village church which dates from the 19th century. The château has been owned by the town of Lisieux since 1958 when it was donated by the Riesener family.

From an architectural point of view the château comprises a half-timbered manor dating from the 15th century and a glazed brick and stone building from the Pré-d'Auge dating from the end of the 16th century.

The chateau combines medieval and renaissance elements and is surrounded by a moat and a peacock garden.

Saint-Pierre Cathedral.

Lisieux’s Saint-Pierre Cathedral is a rare monument which survived the 1944 allied bombardment. Even though the cathedral has been around since the 6th century, the church we see today must have been constructed between 1160 and 1230 by Bishop Arnoul.

From the outset, the architect designed quadripartite rib vaults and flying buttresses, making it one of Normandy’s first gothic buildings. The nave is fairly austere and is inspired by the Gothic style of the Ile de France whereas the most recent parts of the building were constructed in the 18th century (the chevet, the lantern tower and the western façade) in Norman style.

It is wrongly claimed that Henry, the Count of Anjou, the Duke of Normandy and the future king of England married Eleanor of Aquitaine at the cathedral in 1152. Having been involved in the trial of Joan of Arc, Pierre Cauchon was in fact named as Bishop of Lisieux in 1432 and is buried there.

A little about Ste-Thérèse of Lisieux 1873 - 1897.

Generations of Catholics have admired this young saint, called her the "Little Flower", and found in her short life more inspiration for own lives than in volumes by theologians.

Yet Therese died when she was 24, after having lived as cloistered Carmelite for less than ten years. She never went on missions, never founded a religious order, never performed great works. The only book of hers, published after her death, was an brief edited version of her journal called "Story of a Soul." (Collections of her letters and restored versions of her journals have been published recently.) But within 28 years of her death, the public demand was so great that she was canonized.

Over the years, some modern Catholics have turned away from her because they associate her with over- sentimentalised piety and yet the message she has for us is still as compelling and simple as it was almost a century ago.

Therese was born in France in 1873, the pampered daughter of a mother who had wanted to be a saint and a father who had wanted to be monk. The two had got married but determined they would be celibate until a priest told them that was not how God wanted a marriage to work! They must have followed his advice very well because they had nine children. The five children who lived were all daughters who were close all their lives.

Tragedy and loss came quickly to Therese when her mother died of breast cancer when she was four and a half years old. Her sixteen year old sister Pauline became her second mother -- which made the second loss even worse when Pauline entered the Carmelite convent five years later. A few months later, Therese became so ill with a fever that people thought she was dying.

The worst part of it for Therese was all the people sitting around her bed staring at her like, she said, "a string of onions." When Therese saw her sisters praying to statue of Mary in her room, Therese also prayed. She saw Mary smile at her and suddenly she was cured. She tried to keep the grace of the cure secret but people found out and badgered her with questions about what Mary was wearing, what she looked like. When she refused to give in to their curiosity, they passed the story that she had made the whole thing up.

Pays d'Auge

The rolling hills and green twisting valleys of the Pays d'Auge stretch south of the cathedral town of Lisieux and are scattered with magnificent half-timbered manor houses. The pastures here are the lushest in the province, their produce the world-famous cheeses of Camembert, Pont L'Évêque and possibly the smelliest of them all, Livarot . And beside these are hectares of orchards, yielding the best of Norman ciders, both apple (pomme) and pear (poiré), as well as Calvados apple brandy which should come with a health warning so please drink in moderation!

Learn more about "Whats On" in and around Lisieux.

 Basilique de Ste-Thérèse.

 Cathédrale St-Pierre.

 Le Grand Hotel.

Blog submitted by: Sharon at Cle France.

Add CommentViews: 10757
Oct 7

Insurance Cover question

Client's Question: At which point during the french property purchase does the purchaser's responsibility for building insurance start. Is it on exchange of contracts or completion?

You are required to have insurance in place on completion day, so this is something you should start organising once the compromis is signed, and the sale is going ahead. When you attend the notaire's office for the final signing she will require proof that the property is insured, so you should take your policy document with you on that day. It is common practice for the buyer to continue with the vendor's policy, but this is by no means obligatory, and you would be wise to shop around for the best deal before committing yourself.

There are a number of local insurance companies that can provide quotes, as well as local banks, and of course there are now a number of U.K based insurers who specialise in property abroad, so there is plenty of choice out there.

We work closely with an English speaking French insurance agent for all regions of France, and would highly recommend them for price and service, for further details just contact them via their Club Cle France page.

Cle France Healthcare Guide link

Blog submitted by: Sharon at Cle France.

Add CommentViews: 4558
Oct 7

Why I love Lassay les Chateaux

Let us take a look at the beautiful and historical town of Lassay les Châteaux in the region of Pays de la Loire (dept. 53, Mayenne).

One of the main reasons I love this “Petite Cité de Caractère” is because I lived 15 minutes from it for 12 years between 2000 and 2012 and it was my local town to visit for banking, shopping and relaxing with a beer watching the world go by, a great location and not to mention the weekly markets, seasonal fairs and events as well as a annual comedy gala.

Nestled near the top of the Pays de la Loire region and close to the Normandy border is the town of Lassay les Chateaux. Surrounded by the beautiful and gentle rolling landscape of the Mayenne this medieval town offers more than just a magnificent chateau (in fact there are three!). Like elsewhere in the department of Mayenne the pace of life follows the seasons, the old rural ways and traditions don't try and keep pace with modern ways, instead the locals prefer the relaxed atmosphere.

The Chateau is set overlooking a lake which reflects the turrets and you would be hard pushed not to take a competition winning photo. The Chateau, lake and gardens of Lassay les Chateaux keep the visitors coming back time and again as well as attracting newcomers and holiday home owners.

    As mentioned earlier, Lassay les Chateaux, as its name implies, is a town that has more than one chateau. Sadly, two of these are in ruins, but the main one is intact and is a fine example of 15th century architecture. Open to the public, the chateau is a must to visit and casts a marvellous atmosphere over the town.

    Lassay is a market town, and on market day (Wednesday) the locals and visitors alike swarm around the market with a vigour that contrasts with its otherwise tranquil existence. During the summer and sometimes at other times of the year the town celebrates in typical French fashion with Brocante markets, festivals, events and other fete days. These various festivals held in and around the town vary from year to year but the most notable are a summer comedy and music gala and of course, Bastille Day.

    Whether you are planning to visit for a holiday or a property viewing trip, be careful as you may end up staying forever, it has such charm! The centre of town boasts a selection of shops and amenities with a lovely small village community feel. Banks, Post Office, hairdresser, bars and restaurants are easy to find alongside gift shops and the usual Boulangerie and Boucherie.

There are larger towns nearby if need be but Lassay has a new (opened 2011) large supermarket on the outskirts of the town. The area is popular with walkers, cyclists and horse-riders, these slower ways to see the area are the best and most enjoyable. Sports facilities include tennis courts, a sports hall and an outdoor swimming pool, which is open during the summer.      

To get to Lassay les Chateaux the nearest ports are Caen, St Malo and Le Havre. Dieppe 155 miles (to Newhaven), Caen 65 miles (to Portsmouth), Cherbourg 120 miles (to Poole and Portsmouth), St Malo 85 miles (to Portsmouth and Channel Islands), Le Havre 105 miles (to Newhaven and Portsmouth), Calais 250 miles (to Dover and Folkestone).

By Air you could try Caen 65 miles, Rennes 70 miles, Angers 70 miles, Dinard 85 miles, Tours 105 miles, Nantes 115 miles, Paris Orly 150 miles, Paris Charles de Gaulle 165 miles, Paris Beauvais 170 miles (to / from a variety of UK airports).

By Train Laval is only 35 minutes away and Laval to Paris approx. 1 hour 30 minutes on the TGV.

Drivers will find the town from the N12.

    So what about property prices and availability in and around Lassay les Chateaux?

Property here tends to be mid-priced in comparison to the region, in comparison to the UK everything seems to be a bargain!

We always have some excellent bargains available in and around Lassay, from inexpensive town properties to magnificent countryside farmhouses as well as some exciting renovation projects on the market for a very low price.

Chateau and Lake.

The Main High street opposite where the market is held.

The Old linen washing facilities !

That famous photo opportunity again.

One of the other 2 Chateaux.

Chateau from the air.

Blog submitted by: David at Cle France.

 

Add CommentViews: 7463

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