I sold a boat to an excellent client for a jolly nice seller

jonic

Well-Known Member
Joined
12 Mar 2002
Messages
4,113
Location
Solent
www.jryachts.com
Everyone turned up on time for viewings, the buyers were serious, the owners prepared the boat well and listened to a realistic valuation, the survey was good and all the paperwork was received in good order and in a timely fashion.

The VAT invoice was original, the Bill of Sale chain was complete, she was RCD compliant with a certificate to prove it and there was no outstanding finance.

The funds were transferred on time, the inventory was complete and there was even a bit of free berthing thrown in at end.

Then we all had dinner and celebrated the new yacht and discussed the new owners cruising plans. :)
 
Everyone turned up on time for viewings, the buyers were serious, the owners prepared the boat well and listened to a realistic valuation, the survey was good and all the paperwork was received in good order and in a timely fashion.

The VAT invoice was original, the Bill of Sale chain was complete, she was RCD compliant with a certificate to prove it and there was no outstanding finance.

The funds were transferred on time, the inventory was complete and there was even a bit of free berthing thrown in at end.

Then we all had dinner and celebrated the new yacht and discussed the new owners cruising plans. :)

Shhhhhh

Good news is banned on here, especially about brokers.

Next thing, someone will say they sailed a boat somewhere and the weather was fine, no equipment exploded and even the Harbour Masters were polite.
 
Bet you cannot sell mine – too old for VAT and RCD paperwork (me and the boat, as it happens), currently in bits waiting for major works to be finished. Unrealistic expectations of valuation and not going to let you bring “strangers on board” and waste my sailing time.

1961 wooden wreck, offers of £30K will be entertained :) but hurry price goes up every time I do more work to her!
 
Bet you cannot sell mine – too old for VAT and RCD paperwork (me and the boat, as it happens), currently in bits waiting for major works to be finished. Unrealistic expectations of valuation and not going to let you bring “strangers on board” and waste my sailing time.

1961 wooden wreck, offers of £30K will be entertained :) but hurry price goes up every time I do more work to her!

I think you might have just described -

'beautiful 1961 yacht, real magic carpet material, tax exempt and with a decidedly skinny ask'
 
When I sell mine, I want a buyer that I can tussle with a bit more.
I would feel somehow hornswaggled if they coughed up the asking and took me to dinner. :p
 
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