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I think the second hand price will continue to fall because running costs will increase significantly making yacht ownership even more difficult.
Griff Rees-Jones is reported to have said that his Philip Rhodes yacht Undina cost him £70,000 to buy and that he spent close to £500,000 on her; she is now for sale at ... £70,000.
...
Talking of pouring money into things and having no resale value, this W33 has an insane amount of kit for the price.
Talking of pouring money into things and having no resale value, this W33 has an insane amount of kit for the price. New navtech, windvane, rigging. Can't buy right now, but hopefully something like this (assuming it's not a wreck somehow) comes up in 6 months or so.
https://poole.boatshed.com/westerly_33-boat-265204.html?
Talking of pouring money into things and having no resale value, this W33 has an insane amount of kit for the price. New navtech, windvane, rigging. Can't buy right now, but hopefully something like this (assuming it's not a wreck somehow) comes up in 6 months or so.
https://poole.boatshed.com/westerly_33-boat-265204.html?
That W33 does look good value, but it probably will need a new engine soonish ~ £6k, new sails again ~£4.5-6k, new standing rigging ~£3k, new standing rigging £1k before you even think about the condition the wiring is in...
So that's around £15k spent with no discernible impact on the resale value. Undoubtedly she would stand you in good stead for many years though so would have to be a boat you intended to keep for a while to justify the upgrades.
I was talking to a broker earlier this week and he said that boats between 35-55 ft, less than 10 years old and in good order are selling well, many to Northern Europe due to the low value of the pound.
New boat sales he tells me have stalled due to uncertainty regarding Brexit and the low pound.
Thats the problem withe 70's / 80's / 90's british-built boats, even if they're free its still not worth it. They'll be a symphony of chainsaws in boatyards up and down the country over the next 10 - 20 years for the reasons mentioned above and before: little time / many more hobbies to choose from that dont cost like boat ownership / too much money to justify purchase / boomers dying out / chartering / uncertain economy, etc etc..............

Might just be me but I don’t see anything special about that price for a 41 year old boat of that size good kit or not.Talking of pouring money into things and having no resale value, this W33 has an insane amount of kit for the price. New navtech, windvane, rigging. Can't buy right now, but hopefully something like this (assuming it's not a wreck somehow) comes up in 6 months or so.
https://poole.boatshed.com/westerly_33-boat-265204.html?
Why? They’re EU VAT paid assuming you have the VAT paper trail. That won’t change AFAIK?
Very unfortunately, yes it does change in case of a no deal Brexit. There are a few threads on this forum about that topic.
Furthermore I know from a potential boat buyer in Netherlands that he asked for and received an official statement from the NL tax authorities that it does make a big difference if he would buy a boat in UK before or after Brexit in case of a no deal Brexit.
Very unfortunately, yes it does change in case of a no deal Brexit. There are a few threads on this forum about that topic.
Furthermore I know from a potential boat buyer in Netherlands that he asked for and received an official statement from the NL tax authorities that it does make a big difference if he would buy a boat in UK before or after Brexit in case of a no deal Brexit.
Why? They’re EU VAT paid assuming you have the VAT paper trail. That won’t change AFAIK?
I would imagine the argument would be that an EU buyer after any no-deal Brexit would simply be buying an asset for xx euro's and importing into the EU from a 'third-country' . It would be irrelevant what taxes had been paid originally in the third country. So exactly the same scenario as you or I importing a boat from the USA or Thailand or S Africa, you have to pay VAT and import duty.
So I suppose the conclusion has to be that there may be a rush of European Buyers in Sept and October after which almost none and prices will then drop even further.
Yay for Brexit.
That's also quite a succinct explanation of what's going to happen. I had figured along the same lines that as long as there was a paper trail it'd be fine (and that *should* be true for purchases made now but moved after Brexit, but those purchased after brexit should be third countries in effect, hence the possible rush).
The advice seems to be that even if purchases done before Brexit then if a no deal a yacht will be UK Vat paid or EU vat paid but not both. All depends on where the boat is on Brexit day.
I was also underwhelmed by the price you of such an old and inappropriately equipped boat. The basics had not been replaced recently but all sorts of gadgets added that would not help in normal use.