Just a few comments from the other side of the fence.
"In the UK you are more likely to ask your estate agent for a valuation, accept their advice on price, and give them all the information they need to do the best job they can for you. You are also more likely to instruct just one firm. You may let them take the lead in a negotiation. If they do a good job for you you might even be happy paying their fee."
"Here it is more common to tell several estate agents how much you want for your property which is a figure based on no professional or comparable knowledge and is quite likely inspired by prices dating back to 2006 plus a bit. Even property professionals in Spain dont have access to information on prices actually achieved. They have only asking prices. The whole concept of a valuation, in Spain, is confounded by the so called valuations which are based on a formula rather than market knowledge which are the source of a huge amount of misinformation and mis-selling."
In the Uk we had Land registry as a tool but we always generally asked vendors what they were looking to achieve.
Your correct in saying that there are no tools to use for transparency in finding correct selling price.
You have to use old fashioned skils, ie, i know pretty much what every property is selling for in my area, you can then price by comparable sale price, for example on certain urbs villas will sell for 120,000€ so there is no point taking anything on over that price.
We tell vendors what it will achieve, the "i need" discussion is immaterial, the same as "i can't buy anything in the UK for that"argument is invalid.
This is not always met with a smile but it will sell your property.
The usual arguments of "mine is nicer than the one that sold next door" and "but i have aircon and a log burner fitted" are all immaterial, buyers create a pricing level.
"In Spain you are fairly unlikely to give your estate agents any information related to title or any defects or any information that might be useful to the agent doing a proper marketing and sales job"
Every agent should collect all information regarding the legality and finacial commitment of the property (by law)
Escritura.
Suma.
Elctricity and water bills.
Cedula de habitacion.
Final de obra.
Community fees.
Signed resale agreement.
We insist on all these before it can go on the market.
"In fact you dont trust any of the agents and you resent paying their fee (which are indeed far higher as a % than in the UK). All your agents are in a race against each other to find the purchaser, they dont trust each other"
We generally charge 3% (of an average 60,000€) sales price.
Uk agents charge between 1.5% and 2% of £170,000 (average)
We do far far more work in Spain than in the uk, if you do the math, the figures are relative.
Most decent agents now work in an agent network, it is the only way to survive , splitting commissions,sharing clients and having to trust each other implicitly!!
Everybody resents paying fees but most decent people appreciate the work involved these days.
" Purchasers may well be talking to several agents on the same property and have different prices from each of them. You may well be talking to several purchasers at once and even if you arent as there are so many people doing the marketing you have no idea who is talking to who."
This can be due to lazy estate agents and also down to vendors not informing agents that they have dropped prices with other agents, we do a monthly call out to try and update,get prices reduced etc....i know the vendors don't ring the other agents and tell them to drop it as well, hence the pricing difference, the same situation arises when we sell the property, i have seen property still on the web that i sold last year, also you only generally find a property is sold when you call for a viewing or update.
"John what an excellent synopsis of the way estate agents operate in spain i think 1% of the sale price is right for a sole agency placing so sellers could benefit and buyers as well and more agents could then be perhaps trusted"
I beg to differ on some of the posting as you can see above,if agents sold at 1% giving an average commission price of 600€ per sale they would be rarer than rocking horse droppings, nobody can run an estate agency here with average rents of 1,000€ per month and most agents only doing 2 sales per month, when you deduct iva, tax,staff and all other associated overheads it wouldn't work.
Don't forget that only 1 in 5 viewers actaully buy, the average doesn't work out that great, there is a lot of work done for nothing.
One thing that really gets me is the 7% iva now thats an even bigger con surely all that money could provide some regulation in the house purchase market
Iva (vat) is actually 8% on new build property only.
There is no vat on second hand property, it is a 7% property transfer tax.
I purely picked out a few points that were incorrect not to be patronising but i was invited to comment.
A little knowledge is a dangerous thing and it is far easier to jump on the band wagon than to steer it in the right direction!