eagle160
Well-Known Member
hi all.
Just going through the final motions of buying the boat that should hopefully take care of us for the next year (and longer) whilst we set off on our circuit of the med (can't reveal yet what boat it is as we're in the middle of negotiations and it would be pretty easy to back solve which exact boat I'm talking about ).
The survey has now been completed and there are some works and issues that are identified. All quite positive and nothing really material in isolation but in total it adds up to £2-2.5kish (rudder delamination, rope cutter replacement, servicing of certain items) on top of usual maintenance like anti-fouling and buying some safety equipment that's not there (lifevests, flares, some other items) which in total is another £1k ish.
The seller has been pretty flexible so far but I suspect that he feels he's selling the boat as a bargain. At the same time we've been pretty flexible as well so far (the boat is lying in the med and to get to this stage has taken some time and effort on both parts already).
The offer we had accepted is 15% under the asking price, but that asking price was top dollar anyway in my opinion. I think we're pretty much paying "market value" (if such concept exists in this market and for boats!) which is validated in the survey. It is a lot of money though (£75k) and would expect the boat to be in top shape for the price we're paying (there are 7 year older boats of same type available at ~60% of the price of ours).
In the seller's view this is usual maintenance for a boat of this age (15 years). We do have a bit of spare budget for maintenance but did not expect to spend this on rudder delamination (which could be a £100 repair or a £2000 rudder re-build...).
Naive question, is it quite common to negotiate after survey ? What would you do?
Just going through the final motions of buying the boat that should hopefully take care of us for the next year (and longer) whilst we set off on our circuit of the med (can't reveal yet what boat it is as we're in the middle of negotiations and it would be pretty easy to back solve which exact boat I'm talking about ).
The survey has now been completed and there are some works and issues that are identified. All quite positive and nothing really material in isolation but in total it adds up to £2-2.5kish (rudder delamination, rope cutter replacement, servicing of certain items) on top of usual maintenance like anti-fouling and buying some safety equipment that's not there (lifevests, flares, some other items) which in total is another £1k ish.
The seller has been pretty flexible so far but I suspect that he feels he's selling the boat as a bargain. At the same time we've been pretty flexible as well so far (the boat is lying in the med and to get to this stage has taken some time and effort on both parts already).
The offer we had accepted is 15% under the asking price, but that asking price was top dollar anyway in my opinion. I think we're pretty much paying "market value" (if such concept exists in this market and for boats!) which is validated in the survey. It is a lot of money though (£75k) and would expect the boat to be in top shape for the price we're paying (there are 7 year older boats of same type available at ~60% of the price of ours).
In the seller's view this is usual maintenance for a boat of this age (15 years). We do have a bit of spare budget for maintenance but did not expect to spend this on rudder delamination (which could be a £100 repair or a £2000 rudder re-build...).
Naive question, is it quite common to negotiate after survey ? What would you do?