Rent Guarantee Scheme | Home fit for a wag? Manchester’s most expensive house on the market for a mere £8m (well it is a bargain compared with the original £11m asking price)
Most of our landlords use our guaranteed rental income scheme. We have our own list of tenants waiting to move into properties. But just in case there is a void period, should happen, and for some reason your property should be without a tenant, we offer a rent guarantee scheme .
Most people love to snoop around the January sales, inevitably spending far much more than they should in their quest to snap up a bargain.
But while the slashed prices can turn even the most reasonable crowd into a hysterical mob, this reduced bargain is still out of reach of the most grabbing of hands.Rent Guarantee Scheme
Greater Manchester’s most expensive house – which was initially put on the market for £11.25m – is going cut-price after a £3million reduction.
Palatial! The buyer will get a lot of bang for their buck, as the huge home boasts a wide array of rooms – including six receptions
Theatrical: The home even has a turret – for anyone with a desire to survey their land while pretending they live in a medieval castle
The eight-bedroom ‘unique’ mansion in Green Walk, Bowdon, was put on the market for the eye-watering amount earlier this year.
But after failing to tempt a high-flying buyer to part with their cash, the sellers have now knocked more than 25 per cent off the asking price – but it will still take £8.25m to snap it up.
The buyer will be getting plenty for their money. The house boasts nearly 17,000 sq ft of floor space, six reception rooms, a swimming pool, health spa and home cinema.Rent Guarantee Scheme
It remains Greater Manchester’s most expensive home despite the £3m price cut.
But like most items in the post-Christmas sales, it seems the property may not be on the shelf for much longer.
Phillip Diggle, from estate agent Gascoigne Halman, said: ‘We’re very confident we’re close to a conclusion on the house and it will be off the market before the end of January.
‘The house is still the best house on the market in Greater Manchester and particularly since the price reduction there has been a lot of interest and despite the high price-tag it represents real value for money.
‘It’s a superb and completely unique property in a superb area and we knew at this price it wouldn’t be on the market too much longer.
Dinner’s on me! The buyer will need many friends and relatives to fill the seats around the dining room in this huge home, which has 17,000 sq feet
After a long day the negotiating, the buyer can relax with a dip in their sparkling pool, before enjoying a treatment in their home spa
The buyer says that since the price reduction there has been much interest – and says that despite the high price-tag the property represents real value for money
‘There is a great deal of activity in the £5m and above area of the market at the moment, we sold a £6 million house in Cheshire off the market recently.
‘There is actually more activity in that area of the market than in the £2m to £5m section.’
The Bowdon property was built by a local businessman in 2008 and is just half a mile from the region’s second most-expensive house for sale – a £4m eight-bedroom mansion in Devisdale Road.
Former United star Phil Neville put his apartment in the city centre Beetham Tower up for sale for £4m two years ago – it was thought the property was the most expensive flat ever to be put on the market in Manchester.
The asking price was cut to £3.75m in June last year – and it remains on sale as the most expensive property in the city.
The sprawling home is a snip when compared to costlier properties in the capital.
The properties on Egerton Crescent, SW3, are most definitely not easy on the pocket.
Terraced in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in London has just been named the most expensive street in Britain.
The average price of a house there is more than £8million – with one four-bedroom family home recently selling for a massive £12million.
That’s more than 74 times the price of the average home in the UK, which currently sells for just £160,879.
View the original article here