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Anyone advising an offer below the asking price is speculating that houses in Ireland are overpriced and therefore likely to fall in value.
Anyone advising an offer above the asking price is speculating that houses in Ireland are undervalued and therefore likely to rise in value.
So unfortunately it is not possible to answer your question without breaking the rules of this site.
Anyone advising an offer below the asking price is speculating that houses in Ireland are overpriced and therefore likely to fall in value.
Anyone advising an offer above the asking price is speculating that houses in Ireland are undervalued and therefore likely to rise in value.
So unfortunately it is not possible to answer your question without breaking the rules of this site.
Lora, at the risk of breaking rules here, you won't look naive you'll look like a hardassShag it drop the EA a mail and make your offer, let them know you like the house and if you are a ready to go buyer, judge from their feedback where to go next. I know people are saying that you'd be letting other people make higher bids but surely the EA will just come back to you and ask if you can beat it? Have you anything to lose? Arm-chancing is an honourable Irish tradition - in any market...
There is no information on the property only that it is "lovely".
This is a new process for us.
And unfortunately it is not possible to give a fair answer to that question without speculating on the overall direction of the market. Which is banned.
Of course you can answer that fairly
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