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4 Bedroom Cottage Denton Northampton

The Old Dairy is a beautifully presented mid terraced traditional cottage overlooking the village green in Denton. This superb home extending over 2000sqft retains many original features including beams and an inglenook, it has also been substantially extended creating a superb bright and spacious family home.
A stone flagged entrance opens to the very welcoming reception room which has a beamed ceiling and large inglenook with wood burner, to the far end of this room is a ground floor double bedroom or if preferred study/snug. To the rear is a superb kitchen/dining room with a central preparation island and a large dining area, the whole room is flooded with natural light from a conservatory style roof. There is also a guest cloakroom on the ground floor.
On the first floor are three good size double bedrooms one of which has a large en-suite shower room, there is also a family bathroom with a roll top bath. To the rear of this floor is the master bedroom with en-suite shower room and separate dressing room with utility area, the bedroom opens onto the rear garden so could if wanted be used as a further family room.
The gardens to the rear are a delight and a lovely sun trap, there are brick paved terraces and barbeque area leading to a lawn and stocked flower borders. Beyond the freehold title is a further area which the property has sole enjoyment of but is held on a lease for a nominal annual rental. This area can be used as a garden only and is approximately 1/4 acre with two brick outhouses and rear lane access, it’s a very private garden with mature trees and would be ideal as extra entertaining space or if green fingered a superb vegetable garden!
Denton is a village located approximately six mile south east of Northampton. It is a traditional village with a good primary school, village pub, church and village hall. It is well located for access to Northampton, Bedford, the M1 motorway and A45 and the mainline railway station at Northampton for London

Entrance Lobby –

Reception Room – 7.80m x 4.98m (25’7 x 16’4) –

Bedroom 4/Snug – 5.13m x 2.67m (16’10 x 8’9) –

Cloakroom –

Kitchen/Dining Room – 7.75m x 3.53m (25’5 x 11’7) –

Master Bedroom – 4.98m x 3.07m (16’4 x 10’1) –

En-Suite Shower Room –

Double Bedroom – 3.18m x 3.15m (10’5 x 10’4) –

Family Bathroom –

Bedroom – 2.87m x 2.72m (9’5 x 8’11) –

Dressing/Study Area –

Shower Room And Utility Area –

Bedroom/Family Room – 4.72m x 3.35m (15’6 x 11) –

Property Features

  • Mid Terraced Extended Village House
  • Four Bedrooms
  • Reception Room With Inglenook
  • Kitchen/Dining Room
  • Family Bathroom And Two Shower Rooms
  • Family Room/Bedroom 5
  • Delightful Garden
  • Further 1/4 Acre Garden With Outbuildings Available For Nominal Rent
  • Original Features
  • No Chain

Fine & Country Northampton
9 George Row
Northampton
NN1 1DF
Tel: 01604 309030

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Northampton NN2 Postcode Profile

profile nn2

The Norhtampton NN2 postcode has seen quite a few changes over the last year or two. Firstly there was the closing of the Park Campus, which was home to the University of Northampton for the last few decades, when it moved to the new Waterside Campus, off the Bedford road.

The closure of this Campus, not only had a major impact on the area around Boughton Green Road, which was struggling to cope with the thousands of students all converging on the overstretched arterial road at the same time, but there has also been a major demographic change, which has not necessarily impacted property in a bad way, but it has changed demand for property.

As the university of Northampton grew in recent years, so did demand for accommodation for the students, who’s numbers had reached in excess of 10,000 by the time Park Campus closed, thanks to the University’s rising position in ranking over the last few years.

Since Park Campus moved to the Waterside Campus, which is just south east of the town centre, demand for student accommodation in the NN2 area has fallen. This may have initially had some impact on HMO property, but most of that has levelled out now and most of these properties have been re-entering the market as self contained units of family homes. On a positive note, the streets around the area have become noticeably calmer, as the sound of escited of students on their evening’s out is now a distant memory to local residents.

Over the last 12 months, there have been 464 sales with values rising a marginal 0.13% which has held up well against the price drops we have seen in other places.

The large scale building off the Welford road, just before the Bramptons, (NN6 Postcode) will also have a large impact on the Kingsthorpe area, as there are plans for the construction of a large number of properties, including the infrastructure to sustain them, but only time will tell how that will impact demand and subsequently prices.

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Property View Virtual Reality Tours

360' panoramic photographs

Property View is a new venture bringing fascinating technology to the property world. Whether you are selling, developing, renting or building this technology can help with various processes which normally take time and resources to complete. They can scan, and download virtually any space and have it viewable and shareable within 48 hrs.

They create a link to the virtual reality tour so you can share it  worldwide instantly. Totally interactive and immersive content that can act as a virtual open house 24/7, allowing prospective buyers to view and explore any given property from their smartphone/ipad/ tablet or PC.   Get in touch for more exciting features

 

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Will the property market slow even further ahead of Brexit?

  • With 29 days until Brexit deadline, October could be a crunch month for housing
  • A deal with the EU could spark a flurry of sales as market breathes a sigh of relief 

But some experts are warning of a 10 per cent drop if things go the other way 

The UK housing market has been in the brace position since the EU referendum three years ago.

It has been a bumpy ride for the most part. Prices have ground to a halt in some parts of the country, while they have soared ahead in others.

A report by Nationwide yesterday showed overall prices were up just 0.2 per cent on last year.

It is the tenth month in a row that annual house prices have grown by less than 1 per cent. But the crash-landing many fear has yet to come.

Is the mood turning in the hotspots?

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In 1799 William Wordsworth fell in love with a small cottage in Grasmere while on a walking tour of the Lake District and it was there he wrote his ode Home At Grasmere.

More than 200 years on and his eye for the property market has proven to be sound. South Lakeland, which includes the village of Grasmere, saw house prices soar by 8.1 per cent in the year to July, despite plummeting stocks elsewhere.

The region is one of those proving resilient while others flap in the face of Brexit turbulence. But the mood may be about to turn.

Local estate agents Armitstead Barnett recently ran an advertising campaign under the slogan ‘summer is still here but winter is near’.

It might not be Wordsworth but the message is stark. Even agents in growth areas are beginning to worry.

Wait-and-see rules for cautious Brits…

Three million Britons say they have put off buying a home because of Brexit, according to figures published by Royal London this week.

Andrew Holmes, head of residential sales at Armitstead Barnett, says: ‘We’ve seen a flattening of the market.

New instructions have been slower, sales have been slower and people are just being a little more cautious. They don’t want to overexpose themselves to Brexit. October is supposed to be a tipping point.’

Some agents say it is only in the past few weeks that they have started to feel the pinch. Doncaster has seen a 3.6 per cent growth in house prices, but Mark Hunter, partner at Grice & Hunter, says business in the town has ‘ground to a halt’.

He points to the bullish attitude of Boris Johnson in No 10, which is ‘starting to concentrate people’s minds’.

As October 31 draws closer and a possible end to the uncertainty — deal or no deal — is in sight, it seems to make sense for people to hold out for that bit longer.

But Mr Hunter warns that approach is fraught with danger. ‘Should we crash out [of the EU without a deal], there could be serious implications,’ he says. ‘It’s hard to say how far prices would fall but there’s no point in talking it up.’

…But families still need homes

Not everyone believes October will be make-or-break. Parts of the market have proven immune to Westminster wranglings and many hope that will continue.

Mid-market moves for families facing a change in circumstance remain strong. If you need to move closer to a school, or make room for a new arrival, Brexit is largely irrelevant. There are those who can’t afford to ‘wait and see’ and need to get on with their lives.

Indeed, the Nationwide report highlighted the fact that while the number of homes changing hands has gone down, buyer demand remains relatively stable.

Agents Jackson-Stops operates in the mid-to-upper end of the market in Norfolk. Its average property price is £650,000 and it tends to deal in period properties, farm or country houses.

Manager Jonathan Weeks admits there are fewer properties on the market and a limited pool of buyers but that those who are active are serious about getting a deal.

‘The viewings have dropped but the ratio of viewings to offers is very good,’ he says. ‘It’s a classic estate agents’ phrase, but people getting divorced keep us in business.

‘Downsizers looking to retire in the countryside aren’t so motivated. The so-called ‘romantic side’ of the business has slowed. They want to move but there is no time pressure, so why not wait until Brexit blows over?

‘But people who are moving out of necessity will continue to do so, and they are getting a fair price.’

In Nottingham, house prices have risen steadily at 2.6 per cent. Chartered surveyor David Hammond says turnover in the lower end of the market is healthy. ‘People will continue to move out of rented accommodation or mum and dad’s house,’ he says.

Pockets that buck the trend

Pockets of the country appear totally unshaken by Brexit.

Yorkshire and The Humber recorded the highest annual price growth at 3.2 per cent to July this year. Close behind is the North-West, where prices increased by 2.3 per cent.

Malvern Hills in Worcestershire recorded a house price growth of 8.3 per cent.

It has been spurred on by its affordability, proximity to Worcester and Birmingham and opportunities for ‘a traditional English lifestyle’. The mood there is one of unbridled optimism.

‘Malvern is a hotspot at the moment,’ says Colin Townsend, chartered surveyor at John Goodwin.

‘We’ve been expecting a slowdown for a long time, but we’re doing so many viewings across all sectors of the market. There isn’t any evidence that people don’t want to make a decision this year.’

Mr Townsend believes Malvern has benefited from its position in the market. With an average house price of £273,698, it is not as expensive as the nearby Cotswolds or Cheltenham.

That has made it fertile ground for a range of clients, from local entrepreneurs, first-time buyers and downsizers to commuters.

But it is Devon that has seen the most startling growth. North Devon saw house prices soar by 14.8 per cent, the biggest in England.

Mike Adey, residential officer at Greenslade Taylor Hunt, says the region has profited from people seeking a new lifestyle away from the big cities. Renovations are particularly popular, he adds.

‘While I expect it to be quieter during the Brexit period, people need to get on with their lives,’ he says. ‘We live in a lovely part of the world and, hopefully, people continue to want to live here.’

The largest annual price growth by country was recorded in Wales, up by 4.2 per cent over the year to July.

Don’t forget the stamp duty

London has fared particularly poorly since the referendum. House prices have dropped by 1.4 per cent in the past year.

This is largely because prices have had farther to fall in the capital after years of rapid growth before the 2007-08 financial crisis.

Its boroughs account for five of the ten worst performing regions. Newham has seen house prices fall by as much as 9.6 per cent.

Camden is an outlier, recording a growth of 9.5 per cent. But it still costs an average of £477,813 to buy a house in London — more than twice the UK average of £232,710.

John King, chairman of Andrew Scott Robertson, which operates around Wimbledon and Merton in South-West London, says the market has dropped by about 35‑40 per cent in terms of sales.

He accepts Brexit has played its part but says stamp duty has also been a factor. New rules in 2014 pushed up the cost of moving for anyone buying a house worth more than £937,500.

But even those purchasing properties worth £500,000, not far off the average property price in London, face a £15,000 tax bill.

Receipts from stamp duty fell last year for the first time in a decade, according to figures released yesterday by HMRC.

Revenue from the duty fell by 7 per cent to £11.9 billion up to April 2019 because of the UK’s slowing housing market.

Mr King’s greatest fear, however, is not the outcome of the Brexit negotiations but that of an imminent General Election.

Labour has called for a ‘progressive property tax’, which would see owners charged more if they invested more into their home.

It is also looking at slashing the inheritance tax threshold.

‘If we see a Labour victory, that could frighten people and they will be heading for Europe,’ warns Mr King.

 ‘It’s undermining the confidence in the market, particularly for families who have potential inheritance decisions to make.

‘That is probably the biggest factor in the market at the moment. Clients are more worried about a Labour government carrying out those policies. It is frightening them.’

Prepare for turbulence!

One agent in Chesterfield warns in the latest Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors survey that continued political instability will cause house prices to fall by 10 per cent. The report is full of surveyors echoing those concerns.

Mr Hunter says we are ‘moving into a period which, in terms of the economy and property markets, could be one of the most influential in living memory’. Others put it bluntly: ‘Politics, Brexit,’ says one.

But it is impossible to find a consensus. Mr King says that while he has seen prices drop by 5 per cent, he doubts they will fall much further.

‘It will just bump along,’ he says. Mr Hammond is less blasé. ‘We are not prepared for a No Deal,’ he says. ‘The only thing we are prepared for is chaos.’

So for now, the general message appears to be: fasten your seatbelts and prepare for turbulence.

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Vast majority of BTL landlords remain committed

An overwhelming majority of buy-to-let landlords are optimistic about their future in the private rental sector with 84% looking to maintain or expand their portfolio over the next 12 months, fresh research shows.  Just 16% of landlords are looking to reduce the number of properties they have over the next 12 months, according to the latest report published by The Mortgage Lender.

The report, ‘The Mortgage Lender, Buy-to-let: The Landlord Experience’, reveals that the most common number of properties for landlords is between two and four – 45% – while 11% of property investors are now using a limited company structure for their investments.

The report also shows that around half of all landlords agree that tax changes have led to a reduction in the number of private landlords, but just 1% think that has led to a rise in the quality of rental properties. Meanwhile, just 15% of landlords are seeking out specialist tax advice about their rental properties, while only four in 10 – 42% – are using a specialist buy-to-let mortgage broker when organising their borrowing.

Peter Beaumont, The Mortgage Lender’s deputy chief executive, commented:

“Our special report provides an in-depth guide to the buy-to-let market, including landlord obligations and yields around the country.” 

The report also reveals that property maintenance, care of property and tenant behaviour are the top three concerns keeping landlords awake at night.  Beaumont added: “Our panel of landlords have shared their worries and opinions with us and we’ve included landlord case studies to demonstrate the depth of borrower circumstances we are dealing with on a regular basis.”

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Stamp duty could be lowered by Chancellor

A London estate agency says one of its buyers wants to delay completion until November 1 “just in case stamp duty is changed in October”. Aylesford International director Brendan Roberts says one of his firm’s buyers made the request following speculation that stamp duty could be lowered by Chancellor Sajid Javid.

“Anyone looking to sell is unlikely to conclude a sale much before late October even if they found a buyer early September, so agreeing a delayed completion to allow for any changes in SDLT shouldn’t create too much inconvenience and with buyers thin on the ground it is useful to be flexible and adapt to help buyers commit” explains Roberts.

The move follows widespread speculation by government ministers that stamp duty will be reformed – but without saying when or how. Other agents report alternative tactics pursued by purchasers keen to avoid paying more SDLT than they need – but these raise questions over whether conveyancers would help.

“We have had a pronounced increase in enquiries from clients seeking to utilise the existing ‘mixed use’ stamp duty concession. This concession is still not well understood but can yield dramatic savings on higher value properties” explains Gideon Sumption of Stacks Property Search.

“There is a huge and obvious incentive to look at mixed use property where the maximum rate of SDLT is five per cent. There is no current legal definition but such is the amount of money involved there will almost certainly be some case law soon” Sumption continues.

“The current understanding is that for mixed use SDLT to apply, the property needs to have a commercial element, namely enjoy commercial income from land or buildings that from part of the whole. This could be a self-contained annexe let on an assured shorthold tenancy, some pasture let to a farmer or some buildings let as workshops. What won’t qualify are extensive grounds used purely for the enjoyment of the house.”

Another Stacks agent, Bill Spreckley, says buyers are becoming “more and more aware “ not only about the mixed use option but also how so-called ‘multiple dwellings’ can attract lower SDLT.

“If you buy a property with ‘Multiple Dwellings’ – that is an annexe, cottage or flat – then there are discounts available. One takes the price of the whole property, divide it by the number of properties, work out the SDLT per property and then multiply that figure by the number of properties again” he says. He says a principal property sold with two cottages counting as ‘multiple dwellings’ – each sold at a notional £666,666 – would attract stamp duty of £69,999 but sold as one unit at £2m it would incur SDLT of £153,750.

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Barclays introduces fresh rate cuts

Barclays has introduced a new set of rate reductions to its buy-to-let and residential ranges. In total, there have been 19 changes, with cuts of up to 0.13%.

In Barclay’s BTL section for purchase and remortgage, the 60% loan-to-value (LTV) two-year fix with £1,795 product fee has had its rate cut from 1.42% to 1.37%. 

Barclays recently launched a new five-year fixed rate buy-to-let product at 75% LTV. The purchase only deal is available at 2.19% and is subject to a £1,295 product fee. Last month, the lender cut its 75% LTV two-year fixed rate deal from 1.68% to 1.65%. This deal is subject to a £1,795 fee and a maximum loan value of £1m.

Craig Calder, director of mortgages at Barclays, said: “The new reductions we have announced will ensure we continue to offer a highly competitive fixed rate range that provides certainty of payments.”

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Labour to allow private tenants to buy their rented homes!

The Labour Party could bring in a radical “right to buy” scheme if it gains power at the next general election which could help millions of private tenants in the UK to buy their rented homes at a reasonable price, the shadow chancellor has suggested.

John McDonnell is promoting the idea as a way to make it easier for workers to buy the homes they live in, while also tackling what he calls the “burgeoning buy-to-let market” and the problem of landlords who do not maintain their properties.

John McDonnell wants to see tenants have a better chance of buying their homes from landlords (Kirsty O’Connor/PA)

In what would be a day of reckoning for many of Britain’s 2.6 million landlords, the mooted right-to-buy scheme in the private housing market would echo Margaret Thatcher’s policy of the 1980s relating to government housing, under which millions of council tenants bought the property in which they lived. Mr McDonnell set out some loose guidelines for the Labour idea – first suggested by Jeremy Corbyn during his 2015 bid for leadership of the party – based on the premise that the sum paid by tenants wishing to buy their dwelling would not necessarily be the market price.

“You’d want to establish what is a reasonable price, you can establish that and then that becomes the right to buy,” he told the Financial Times. “You (the government) set the criteria. I don’t think it’s complicated.”

Mr McDonnell suggested the plan would be a way of redressing problems such as landlords refusing to invest in their properties while making a “fast buck” at the cost of their tenants and the community.

“We’ve got a large number of landlords who are not maintaining these properties and are causing overcrowding and these problems,” he said.

Mr McDonnell also detailed a bold share transferal proposal, under which a Labour government would confiscate some £300 billion of shares in 7,000 large companies and hand them to workers, in what would be one of the largest ever raids by a government on the private sector seen in a western democracy. Under that plan, every company with more than 250 workers would have to gradually transfer 10 per cent of their shares to their employees, the paper said.

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Leeds BS launches 10-year fixed rate mortgage range

Leeds Building Society has this morning launched a new range of 10-year fixed rate buy-to-let products. There is a product available at 2.49% up to 60% loan-to-value (LTV) and 3.29% deal up to 70% LTV. Both products are subject to a £999 product arrangement fee and come with free standard valuation and fees assisted legal services.

Matt Bartle, director of products at Leeds Building Society, commented:

“Our new ten-year buy-to-let products provide additional choice for landlords, and follow our recent rate reductions and the introduction of new cashback incentives in our range.

“Longer term fixes provide landlords with the opportunity to budget for their mortgage costs over a decade, as well as saving any fees associated with remortaging during the period.

“In the current rate environment, fixing for a longer term offers landlords some security at a time of economic uncertainty.”

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25% of private landlords do not meet safety standards

A quarter – 25% – of homes rented from private landlords fail to meet the national Decent Homes Standard when taking into account hazards, costs and other characteristics, analysis of the English Housing Survey reveals.  Households containing several million people are currently living in unsafe or unsuitable rented accommodation, according to the research by VeriSmart.  The study by the independent property inspectors details how 19.5% of homes in the country, which works out at about 4.5 million properties, failed to meet the government’s Decent Homes Standard, when taking into account hazards, costs and other characteristics.

The assessment of the English Housing Survey, which dates back to 1967, shows that the social sector had the lowest proportion of non-decent homes at 13%. 

The most common Category 1 hazards – the most dangerous type of hazard – were falls and fires. Falls on stairs, on a level and between levels accounted for the three most common types of hazard, with fires in fourth place. Converted flats were deemed the most hazardous property type, with 21% of such homes likely to contain hazards, while private homes were the next most dangerous by this measure (14%).

Houses were close behind (12%), with flats proving safer (8%), though social rented homes were least likely to play host to a hazard at just 6%. Some 1.1 million homes had a serious fire hazard – for example no smoke alarms, old or faulty electrical systems, missing fire doors – and other hazards included damp and mould, electrical safety faults and hot surfaces. Jonathan Senior, chairman of VeriSmart, commented: “The figures are worrying when one considers that one in five homes is sub-standard as far as safety, costs and other measures are concerned.

“Some may fret at the average cost to fix a property so that it meets the required standard, but when these properties are falling below expectations in part due to hazards, safety surely has to take priority.

“We recently looked at the tragic number of home accidents – many involving children and many leading to fatalities – and it’s clear that chances can’t be taken in this area.”