There is a particular kind of viewing that almost every buyer recognises in retrospect: the one where you walked around, admired the kitchen, noted that the bedrooms were a good size, and left without finding out anything that actually mattered. Viewings feel informative when they happen and can be surprisingly thin on substance when you try to remember what you actually learned. The remedy is preparation, and it begins before you step through the door.
Before you book the viewing
The most useful research happens before you arrive at the property. Checking the listing history of a property on Rightmove or Zoopla, using the price history or listing history tools available on both platforms, tells you whether the property has been on the market before, for how long, and at what price. A property that has been listed and withdrawn multiple times, or that has been on the market for considerably longer than comparable homes in the area, is worth understanding before you invest time in a visit.
Check the Land Registry sold price history for the property and its immediate neighbours. Understanding what the home last sold for, and when, gives you useful context for assessing the current asking price. It is also worth confirming the tenure before viewing. Leasehold properties carry implications around service charges, ground rent, and lease length that are fundamental to the purchase decision and worth knowing in advance.
Questions to ask the agent before you arrive
A brief conversation with the listing agent before the viewing can save considerable time and reveal information that does not appear in the listing. Ask why the seller is moving, how long the property has been on the market, and whether there have been any offers that did not proceed and why. Agents are not obliged to share all of this, but many will provide useful context if asked directly.
Ask whether the seller has a related purchase and whether they are in a chain. A seller who has already found their next home is typically more motivated to proceed than one who is still searching. A long or complex chain is a material factor in whether a sale completes smoothly and within a reasonable timeframe. Understanding this before you develop an attachment to a property is genuinely useful.
During the viewing: What to look at beyond the obvious
Most buyers instinctively assess room sizes, natural light, and storage. The things worth examining more carefully are those that are easier to miss in the flow of a viewing. Check the condition of the windows, particularly the seals on double glazing and the state of any timber frames. Look at the ceilings and corners of rooms for any signs of damp or water ingress, which can indicate roof or plumbing issues. Examine the condition of the boiler, ask when it was last serviced, and check whether a service record is available.
Note where the property sits in relation to neighbouring buildings. North-facing gardens and rooms that are shadowed by adjacent properties for much of the day are details that photographs do not always communicate accurately. If the property has a garden, visit it and assess its size, condition, and aspect directly rather than from the listing images.
Questions to ask during the viewing
What is included in the sale? Fixtures, fittings, white goods, and garden structures are not automatically included and can be a source of late-stage disagreement if not clarified early. Ask specifically about anything you would assume to be included.
How old is the roof, and when were the electrics last tested? An Electrical Installation Condition Report should have been carried out within the past five years for any rented property and is increasingly common for owner-occupied sales. If one exists, ask to see it.
What are the utility costs? Sellers are not always forthcoming with this information, but a rough sense of monthly energy bills, particularly for older or larger properties, is relevant to your ongoing affordability calculation.
Are there any planning applications, disputes, or known issues with neighbouring properties? This question is most usefully put to the seller directly, if the opportunity arises, rather than solely to the agent.
After the viewing
If a property feels like a serious possibility, a second viewing is almost always worthwhile, ideally at a different time of day. Morning light, evening ambience, and the level of street noise at rush hour can all present quite differently from a Saturday afternoon visit. A second viewing with a trusted friend or family member who was not present the first time often surfaces observations that emotion or familiarity has filtered out.
The questions a buyer asks at the viewing stage are the ones that shape the offer, the survey scope, and the conveyancing process. Approaching each viewing with a clear set of priorities makes every one of them more productive.
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