How to: Background check a developer

How to: Background check a developer
Nicola TrotmanDecember 17, 2020

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Buying a new apartment off the plan is increasingly popular, but there can be pitfalls if individuals fail to do the necessary research on the property developer.

Background checking a developer doesn’t mean becoming Sherlock Holmes and sleuthing around, but it does require a potential purchaser to ask questions and take an interest in a developer’s history.

The best place to start is online by looking at property blogs and newspaper articles. A quick search of the developer’s name should yield results. Are there any court actions against a developer? Bad feedback on forums should ring alarm bells.

CBRE director of residential development Matthew Ramsay says the other key step is to research a developer on their website and see what other projects the company has developed.

“You can go out and see the display suite and see the quality of the actual project, or even older things they’ve built, to see the quality of the finishes,” says Ramsay.

Ramsay says there are two types of developers, tier one and tier two.

“There’s the developer who will employ a third party builder and it’s important to know who that third party builder is. It needs to be someone who has a signification in the market and someone who has done residential construction before,” says Ramsay.

“If a builder is known as a tier one or a tier two builder, then they’re known as a good quality builder in the market place.”

If an individual is going through a buyer’s agent, the agency will generally obtain information through their agent contacts in the market and will know the quality of the product the developer provides through past experience.

Property Searchers managing partner Scott McGeever says it is important to look at the facilities offered in the complex, as they can be big-ticket costs down the track and significantly add to strata expenses.

McGeever says to look at the type and quality of the construction and the level of fittings and fixtures that are used in the complex and well as the interior of the property itself.

“If they are cheap and nasty, they tend not to age well and look tatty after a short period and that will effect re-sale,” says McGeever.

Most new development projects have a mandatory seven-year structural warranty with an insurer and Ramsay says buyers do have rights in their contract of sale if things were to go askew.

“In most, if not all contracts of sale, there is a deadline date in which the developer must have the apartment completed and hand it over to the buyer,” says Ramsay.

“If the developer misses that deadline date, the buyer then has the right to refuse the contract and the deposit is returned.

“If the apartment layout changes or there’s significant changes to the apartment, the buyer also has the right to refuse the contract.”

It’s also important to have the contract of sale read by a solicitor.

With the right research done into the developer, the architect and the contract details, buying off the plan does not need to be a risky property investment.

 

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Nicola Trotman

With a penchant for the written word, Nicola has built a career doing just this – now Creative Director at thriving Melbourne-based PR agency, Greenpoint Media.

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