I am involved in this market and a statement that many of the bank properties are garbage is a bit of a sweeping statement as what we are seeing, are new properties, where the developers have had to return them to the bank because they cannot afford the mortgages and community fees, coming onto the market at big discounts
All the banks typically want to do is recover the original mortgage amounts given to the developers and avoid the on-going community fee obligations which at around €2000 a year soon mount up
If you look for example at properties recently sold by CAM on Polaris, and which nearly all sold out as they were at least 70% discount
I am always asked what's the catch and normally there are a few things to watch, the first is that even though these properties are new, unfurnished and never lived in, they are sold as resale properties and you pay a higher rate of transfer tax and the process can be more complex, takes longer as yes the offer goes to the bank for acceptance. Also there is an additional cost to get utilities connected, typically around €600 for water & electricity, €200 more for gas
Next thing to watch is even though the properties are new they are sold as seen, they may have been standing sometime and will often have some damages, they may have been broken into and have items stolen. Recently on one development we went to they had taken the kitchens and boilers from 5 properties, so you MUST check the property or have somebody do this for you
Watch out for any guarantees you don't get the opportunity to have snagging defects repaired or the normal 3 years from the builder because the builder may not be about anymore so the only fall back is the 10 years structural cover, same applies it there is AC fitted or white goods
On the debt front one good things is that typically the ban will have cleared everything but you still need a lawyer to check this, things like discharge of any mortgage or community fees, if previously occupied the previous bills but remember if you buy a property with debts on and you don't discover them, normally you become responsible for those debts
When we entered this market we approached it in a different way, we actually visited the development and looked at the properties and paperwork, before listing and still found developments with no COH and where, even based on the discounted rates, that they would just be too expensive to get into a saleable condition.
With the properties that we then decided to list we then inspected and graded then noting the defects and getting the costs to repair and most of the issues we find are water ingress and missing items
It means that we have found some real bargains, for example 2 bed properties Frontline on Corvera, originally €220k, now €60k