Often, citizens turn to real estate offices, believing that the company's specialists will do everything for them and the transaction will go smoothly. At the same time, practice reveals many cases when, having turned to a realtor, a person acquires ownership rights to an apartment that has already been sold to another person, or to that housing where, in addition to him, several other family members of the former owner are registered, etc. There are many cases and you can list them endlessly.
Instructions
Step 1
This does not mean that realtors deliberately wanted to harm you. Yes, there are cases when the realtor deliberately misleads the client and, through fraudulent actions, takes possession of part of the funds, but those transactions are also appropriate where the realtor, due to his incompetence and indifference to work, unintentionally misleads the client. In both cases, you run the risk of losing your savings, accumulated over the years, and still not get real estate.
Step 2
How can you check the purity of the transaction and the conscientiousness of realtors yourself, what exactly should be checked? You need to check if the premises that you acquire in ownership or rent have been seized.
Check to see if there are any restrictions or encumbrances on the property that the seller may be silent about.
Step 3
Check the documents of the person who sells or leases the premises, whether they are the owner and whether they are authorized to carry out such transactions. At the same time, find out on what basis the seller received the ownership of the property, whether his rights to this real estate object are disputed in court.
Step 4
Collect information about who is registered in the purchased apartment or house and whether there may be any consequences for you from this, whether there are any third parties to him that the seller could have kept silent about.
Step 5
Check all technical documents for housing and find out if there was an unauthorized redevelopment or conversion of the property.
Step 6
Carefully read all the documents present in the transaction, including all the clauses of the contract being concluded.