Category Archives: Property Works Mallorca Surveyor’s Blog

Would you pay more for an energy efficient property?

Slightly more than half of the house buyers and tenants (52%) say they would be willing to pay more for an energy-efficient home, according to a survey by Look & Find.

In light of these results, it seems that the energy efficiency certificate, which has been compulsory for all property transactions in Spain since June 1st, might have become a relevant factor in the decision to purchase or lease a property.

These new certificates do not only include an energy rating of the home, but also recommendations for improving its energy efficiency and a financial assessment of the costs and their amortization by means of energy savings.

However, over 90% of property owners looking to sell or rent do not yet know they have to acquire this certification.

Energy certificates for property in Mallorca and rest of Spain now required

As of April this year, all property owners are now required to obtain an energy certificate on their asset prior to sale  (or rental – we understand for a period greater than 4 months).

El certificado energético, obligatorio para la vivienda de segunda mano a partir de 2013

A notary will not perform a property transfer without one of these documents.

All estate agencies are required to have this, along with up-to-date registry and tax documents prior to marketing.

Specially qualified architects, surveyors, industrial engineers, and official energy efficiency surveyors will be able to provide this.

How much these documents will cost seem to vary, with figures being banded around from 300€  to 600€. We understand they will be valid for 10 years.

How these measures will be implemented is not known, considering the number of properties for sale.

The reports will cover areas such as boilers, glass thickness, roof insulation etc. It will also carry recommendations on how to improve efficiency.

They will be valid for 10 years.

El “certificado de eficiencia energética” as it is known is Spanish, will not apply to new build properties as they have energy certificates since 2008.

PropertyWorks is happy to provide details of our collaborating company

Click here to provide details and we will forward your information to our collaborating energy certificate company

Do you have a Holiday rental property in the Balearics? The legality explained

this article is taken from Spanish Property Insight and written by Will Begsa of ETL lawyers.

Please note the information provided in this article is of general interest only and is not to be construed or intended as substitute for professional legal advice.

http://www.spanishpropertyinsight.com/2013/04/29/tourist-rental-licences-in-the-balearics-explained/

High homeownership rates mean that the average Spaniard is much richer than his northern european counterpart

The controversial conclusion of a study on the average capital of European citizens per country, elaborated by the European Central Bank (ECB) and published last Tuesday, is that the average Spaniard is richer (and much more so) than his German counterpart.

At a time when southern Europe calls for the “solidarity” of its supposedly wealthier northern neighbors, it is surprising to learn that, in fact, in terms of private capital, things are not what they seem. According to figures from the ECB, the average net assets (minus all debts) of an average  Spanish citizen totaled 291,400 euros, compared with 195,200 for Germans, 233,400 for the French, 170,200 for the Dutch or 275,200 for the Italians (the second highest). If these data are correct (in Spain they were collected in 2008 before the housing bubble had fully burst), it would mean that the average Spaniard is 50% richer than the average German, 25% richer than the French and 71% richer than an average citizen from the Netherlands.

This is not all. In fact, if we look at the medium -that is, those Spaniards located in the middle of an imaginary list going from the richest to the poorest, the difference is even greater: the median in Germany is 51,400 euros, 115,800 euros in France and 103,600 euros in the Netherlands of EUR, while in Spain it totaled 182,700 euros followed by 173,500 euros in Italy.

While the Germans account for 28.7% of European households, they have only 24.3% of Europe’s wealth, while the Spanish, with 12.3% of households, has 15.6% of the EU’s capital.

Incidentally, a special case in all these comparisons is Cyprus. Its citizens, with an average of € 670,900 (266,900 euros of medium) are the second richest in the EU after Luxembourg.

The key to this surprising data is the different ownership structures between citizens of one country or another. Spaniards and Italians have a huge love of bricks and mortar. That is, they want to own their homes. And the truth is that they do: 82.7% of the Spanish and 68.7% of Italians own their own homes, compared with 44.2% of Germans and 55.3% of the French.

The average capital among Spanish homeowners is 337,900 euros, after deducting outstanding mortgage debt; while the capital of non-homeowners is 68,900 euros. German homeowner’s average capital is higher, 381,200 euros. The problem is that many Germans do not own property.

Obviously, other factors should be taken into account. First, the average income in Spain is still well below that of its northern neighbors. And this is important because homeownership burdens become heavier when the family’s income is lower. On the other hand, we must keep in mind that one has to live somewhere.

Furthermore, it should be noted that only 5.6% of Spaniards have mutual funds, compared with 17% of Germans or Dutch, and only 23% have private pension plans, compared to 46% of Germans and 50% in the Netherlands. This will mean, in the future, that citizens from these countries will have higher incomes, but also face an extra expense that homeowners will not have to face.

So, the question is: which is better, having a larger capital but a lower income, or having a higher income in exchange for lower equity?

The cheapest properties in Mallorca 2013??

1b

For the urbanites.

Its not pretty and the area is colourful, but for 17,500€ you get a 70m2, 2 bed apartment in the centre of Palma.  That cant be bad and works out at about 250€/pm2. Considering the average price in Palma is about 1,800€/pm2 it looks an absolute bargain.

.

1

For the rural type

A 20m2 stone shed in a field in Petra. It comes with 1100m2 of land, a toilet and a stream!  

At 21,000€ this is very cheap.

A beautiful and natural home to be demolished…

This house is apparently harmful to the rural character of the area.

charlie1

It is made of straw bails and timber.

Charlie, the owner, built on a large plot in Pembrokeshire

He did though, overlook one small detail, planning permission. He has applied now, retrospectively.

It is claimed it is harmful to the environment. I suspect he is being made an example of.

In my view,  it is fairly clear he is no big-time developer, it is a sustainable and wonderful economic solution for housing his family.

More at   http://naturalhomes.org/save-charlies-house.htm

A flying skyscraper… Is this the future?

“Light Park” is a skyscraper designed to hover over the streets of traffic-jammed, polluted Beijing, by architects Ting Xu and Yiming Chen. They conceive the future of skyscrapers as mega-structures that make up for the shortage of urban space on the ground by hovering up in the air by means of a massive helium-filled balloon.

The Light Park uses non-polluting solar energy for its propulsion and is designed to provide  housing, commercial and recreational spaces – a sort of utopian eco-city.

The technology behind the Light Park is based on existing hellium balloon designs. It uses solar-powered propellers, airbags and atmospheric pressure for takeoff and cruise flight. Translucent solar panels located on the top of the aircraft. In order to avoid additional weight and decrease wind resistance, the skyscraper uses a cable-suspended structure to attach the slabs to the mushroom-like cap. The planting slabs are irrigated with rainwater collected on the large cap surface and are distributed in a way which allows maximum exposure to sunlight on each level.

European court rules Spanish mortgage law is abusive

From El Pais.

http://elpais.com/elpais/2013/03/14/inenglish/1363264199_406548.html

The European Court of Justice on Thursday ruled that Spain’s mortgage law is incompatible with a European directive on abusive practices in consumer contracts, opening the door to more legal protection for households facing eviction from their family home.

The ruling comes in response to a question posed by a Barcelona court in connection with the eviction of Moroccan immigrant Mohammed Aziz from his home in January 2011, after he failed to meet mortgage payments on a 138,000-euro loan granted to him by savings bank CatalunyaCaixa in July 2007.

The court wanted to know if the eviction breached Aziz’s rights. The European Court ruled Thursday that the process of ousting him from his home infringed the European Union’s 1993 Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts (93/13EEC) directive on consumer protection.

The ruling will apply to all eviction cases currently being processed across Europe but will not apply retroactively, as pressure groups have been calling for. Amendments to the mortgage law, which is more than a century old, are currently going through parliament, and it appeared as if the government was waiting for the Luxembourg-based court’s judgment before proceeding with the passage of the draft law.

One of the anomalies of the current law in Spain is that if a homeowner fails to meet a single monthly mortgage payment, the bank can initiate accelerated proceedings to evict the borrower and take possession of the property. Even if the borrower alleges the contract he has signed is abusive and a court agrees with him, if the eviction has already been carried out the homeowner has the right to compensation but not the right to recover the property. The bank can also ask for full repayment of the loan even after obtaining possession of the property in question.

“The Court […] holds that the Spanish legislation does not comply with the principle of effectiveness, in so far as it makes it impossible, or excessively difficult, in mortgage enforcement proceedings initiated by sellers or suppliers against consumer defendants, to apply the protection that the (93/13EEC) directive confers on those consumers,” the court’s ruling said.

The court also questioned whether Aziz would have willingly signed on equal terms with the bank a contract that included a penalty clause for back payments with an annual default rate of 18.75 percent. “The national court must in particular compare that rate with the statutory interest rate and determine whether it is appropriate for securing the attainment of the objectives pursued in Spain and does not go beyond what is necessary to achieve them,” the court determined.