From 1 June next year the HIP will be mandatory - and will cost about £600
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From 1 June next year, the HIP will be mandatory - and will cost about £600. Vendors may have to wait up to 14 days while it is prepared before they can sell. Try selling without it and the fine will be £200 - each time.Why does the Government think hips will make buying and selling easier? It claims HIPs will shorten the time it takes to sell because there will be transparency from the start, especially as to a property's condition. It holds seminars on the impact of Alzheimer's and of some physical disabilities.The village concept is still too new for one to be sure about investment potential, but if a development has been in existence for some years, would-be buyers should check on resale values. Also ensure that you check the lease before purchasing, because many have specific restrictions.There are 9.6 million over-65s, some 15.7 per cent of the total UK population, and by 2030 this is forecast to grow to 14.8 million people, a predicted 22.7% of the population Retirement properties are here to stay.. In just over a year, the home information pack (HIP) will be part of every property transaction. The Government insists it will be better for the public - but criticism is mounting.
Last week, the Conservative Party said it will oppose its introduction, and research by the National Association of Estate Agents shows that the public is beginning to have doubts. It uses the term "designer living" in marketing material to attract those who may have linked retirement homes with dowdy, functional design and style.The longest-standing developer in this field in the UK is the American firm Sunrise Assisted Living, which has 11 villages across southern England and the Midlands (see www.sunrise-care.co.uk).Although it, too, emphasises that older age presents opportunities as well as problems, it overtly recognises the issues that its clients face. Also, we don't just provide a communal lounge and a kitchen - we have restaurants, bars, shops bowling greens and Wellness Suites in our villages. You could easily spend £30 or £40 plus a month on membership at a health club for these," says Cockell.Many villages offer transport services including wheelchair-adapted vehicles - a far cry from the simple bus service to local supermarkets advertised by some developers of small blocks or estates.Richmond's properties are at the top end of this sector, with prices at some villages hitting £799,000 (call 0845 607 6405 or visit www.richmond-villages ). You might well have to pay £70 to £80 per week in management fees but our emergency call-service links you directly to qualified nursing care. Other villages have much higher service charges but devotees of the village principle vigorously defend them."Developers of typical retirement blocks charge £50 to £60 per week in management fees which embrace insurance, window cleaning, an emergency call service, maintaining the building and so on" says Keith Cockell of Richmond, another retirement village developer, with five communities in the Midlands and East Anglia."Compare this with a care village.
Because Denham is typical of these villages in targeting elderly buyers in particular, there will also be a doctor's surgery, 24-hour support staff, a care team for home visits in the village, and domestic help for shopping, ironing and even gardening.Prices start at £279,000 (call 01895 836333 or go to www.denhamgardenvillage.co.uk), but a possible downside with all retirement villages is service charges - these are inevitably higher than in small blocks or estates, because of the increased facilities.In Denham's case, a monthly fixed charge of £113 covers repairs and maintenance plus the 24-hour on-site emergency-response team Some additional home-help type services cost £10 an hour. It has become a wider retirement village with 326 homes in 30 acres of woodland. In line with the US concept, there will be a restaurant, caf?ar, swimming pool, fitness suite, convenience store and walking trails. Now this approach, having spread to Australia and New Zealand, is moving to the UK - although a shortage of land and our colder climate mean our versions of villages are smaller and may have fewer services than in the US. In theory these communities are open to those aged 55 and above, but in reality the villages tend to attract significantly older buyers. One of the largest examples in this country is Denham Garden Village in Buckinghamshire, where Anchor Trust, a retirement housing specialist, is spending £60m to transform a 1950s community previously owned by the Licensed Victuallers National Homes charity, and used for retired pub landlords. "Quite a number of purchasers are Googling the vendor before going to see the property, just to see if they are top executives with IBM or something, and some vendors are doing the same on potential buyers," Hunt says..
Retirement villages began life in the US. Instead of being a single building or small estate of flats - by far the most popular form of private retirement housing in the UK - the village concept usually involves shops, restaurants, sometimes gyms and sports amenities, and on-site medical services. "If a prospective buyer really wants to see how a house fits into its surroundings, they can go on to Google Earth and see how it sits in the village," Hunt says.Both vendors and purchasers are using Google to find out more about the other party as well. "We even get people ringing up on their mobiles saying they are sitting outside the property and can they see it now."The arrival of Google Earth, on which you can zoom in from outer space to a detailed picture of almost anywhere on the planet, is useful for buyers moving to a new area. "People traditionally took a week to arrange a viewing, but now we are getting buyers ringing up at lunchtime and expecting to go round that afternoon," he says. Hometrack , for example, provides valuations based on recent local prices, combined with information on the specific property, such as the type of property and the number of bedrooms, so it should be more accurate than simply averaging local prices.Hometrack.co.uk also provides the usual Land Registry and other data free, but the full home valuation costs £20. The company warns, however, that the valuation is accurate only for run-of-the-mill properties - unusual or characterful homes are difficult to value even for experienced surveyors.The web is now so popular that it is changing the way we look for houses, according to Alexander Hunt of Cluttons.
It even tells you what paper they read (in my postcode, it is The Independent).UpMyStreet is free, but more specific information relating to the property you might be interested in is usually paid for. "If you have a gut instinct about the way a property should be offered, search on the web for something like it and ring the letting agent," he advises. "If they say that the property has gone, then you're on the right tracks."A large amount of information on the vicinity can be gleaned from official statistics on crime, education and even the socio-economic groups of the residents. The main site for this sort of information is UpmyStreet , where you can discover what group the residents of any particular postcode belong to, the average wage in the area, the number of benefits claimants, the crime rate and the age distribution.

