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You searched for listings within nr13. There are currently 36 price drops in this postcode. Recently updated listings are highlighted in pink. Click here to sort by last updated date.
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| address | type | original price | current price | change | days on market | postcode | |
| Sutton Crescent, Freethorpe, Norwic NR13 3NX | 3 bedroom | £179,999 | £171,000 | DOWN 4% | 136 days | (nr13) | |
| Freethorpe NR13 3NX | 3 bedroom | £179,999 | £171,000 | DOWN 4% | 140 days | (nr13) | |
| Acle NR13 3RH | 3 bedroom | £170,000 | £164,750 | DOWN 3% | 54 days | (nr13) | |
| Woodfarm Cottages, Moulton St Mary, NR13 3ND | 2 bedroom | £169,950 | £164,950 | DOWN 2% | 94 days | (nr13) | |
| Acle NR13 3DP | 2 bedroom | £169,500 | £159,500 | DOWN 5% | 54 days | (nr13) | |
| Rotten Marsh, Acle, Norwich NR13, T NR13 3DP | 2 bedroom | £169,500 | £159,500 | DOWN 5% | 87 days | (nr13) | |
| Blofield Three BR, OPEN HOUSE - MON NR13 4JF | 3 bedroom house | £160,000 | £150,000 | DOWN 6% | 63 days | (nr13) | |
| Fairfield Close, Little Plumstead, NR13 5JD | 3 bedroom | £154,950 | £149,950 | DOWN 3% | 54 days | (nr13) | |
| Moulton St Mary NR13 3NF | 2 bedroom | £150,000 | £138,950 | DOWN 7% | 124 days | (nr13) | |
| Mill Road, Halvergate, Norwich NR13 NR13 3PG | 3 bedroom | £145,950 | £134,950 | DOWN 7% | 103 days | (nr13) |
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Comments
- chas || I speak as a cash buyer. I have already taken the hit, in my case £55000 off my already moderate asking price when I sold. My money sits in (safe) banks earning interest. The best opportunities in Norfolk do sometimes sell, but the average just do not. As a cash buyer , I can only say your prices are too high if you have not sold, your agent has probably done you no favours by inflating your selling price to get your custom ,(some of them are paid just to get you in the window you know) and now you sit there with no viewings. Well, I and others like me will consider your house, but not until it leaps out at us. The average slightly boring house has to be 25% under its peak, I am sorry to say. The tide has gone out and you are sitting at the high water line. -- left at Wed Oct 22 11:34:36 +0000 2008
- Jill || Chas. Most sellers are in denial! They cannot believe their houses are worth less that a year ago. Also, as many people borrowed in excess of 5x earnings/100%-125% mortgages their houses are worth much less than they paid for them. Thats why they cannot drop too far. There will be thousands of repossessions. -- left at Sun Oct 26 17:07:38 +0000 2008
- chas || Chas // Jill. You do have to feel for those unable to drop prices. The worst of all this is that I and others would buy, if only the estate agent (no names) that represents the majority of houses in my area were not in denial. They are certainly doing the customers no favours. I was told recently by this agent that this area is not affected by any downturn..... Talk about ignorance. Have a look at auction results here, any number of houses that do not sell at £100,000 or even less. Sellers need to buy a quality newspaper each day and get themselves up to speed. Also remember that when selling prices are described as going down by a certain percentage, that is for the cream of the houses, the only ones selling. The average house has to currently lose 20% from its 2006 price to raise interest and that figure is only going to get worse. (recently confirmed by a "sensible agent"). House buyers are a savvy bunch, we know how to find out how much sellers and their neighbours paid and when.It is not hard to realise many sellers bought recently and are now trying to sell for the same price to get out of the housing market. Many can sit tight, and have no problems, but executors of wills, people who have to move, and those people (and there will be many) who sadly lose their jobs and fear repossession have to get real. The enemy of sellers is disbelief. Sorry to point out more bad news for sellers but the land registry figures, often quoted, are only announced for completed sales. The figures that will be given out at end October, will therefore be for sales that started in perhaps May, or June. That figures for post banking crash will not come out until the new year. I predict at least 30% price drop by end of 2009 from late 2006 price levels. Note this is only 5% higher than some Building society chairman are predicting. -- left at Tue Oct 28 13:47:49 +0000 2008
- monica || Chas. you really need to research into what is actually happening in the housing market before you bemoan the fact that sellers havent lowered their prices! Many of them simply cannot go lower as they owe substantial sums on their mortgages. That is why house prices have rocketed! Buyers have borrowed in excess of 5x income which they now cannot afford to sell cheaply. -- left at Tue Dec 30 23:59:05 +0000 2008
- chas || Monica, you appear to have missed the first line of my comment. As I said, "you do have to feel sorry for those unable to drop prices". Care to apologise? -- left at Sat Jan 10 17:32:06 +0000 2009
- Monica || I no longer feel sorry for buyers who are unable to sell their houses in Norfolk. House prices are more expensive in Norfolk than in some parts of Essex which is ridiculous......Just hang on to your cash first time buyers.there will be repossessions a plenty soon! -- left at Sun Mar 22 17:59:57 +0000 2009
- Tim || Just work very hard in your free timeto add value to your house, you really can do a lot you know, and its good fun too. But you need grit and determination.... -- left at Wed Aug 11 09:14:26 +0000 2010
- chas || Here we are, 4 year down the line from when reality hit the housing market, and more reality is to come. Its the sales volume that is now leading the fall. Norfolk is running at half the sales it had pre Dec 2008. I will say that again - half the buyers have gone. Try selling anything when that happens. If your house is stuck on the market, then it is probably too late for you. Greed drove the boom, and greed is driving the slump in sales. Houses are only worth what someone is prepared to pay. Sellers don't like that reality. I have been hit hard by the economic conditions by the way, so I am not waving smugness in anyones face. But put all my hard earned into an unsaleable pile of bricks? Think of house ownership as an anchor around your neck. -- left at Fri Oct 28 10:40:40 +0000 2011
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