Eastern Shore Bill wrote:
Once the survey is done, would it be standard practice to reduce the offer by the amount of essential fixes?
That's the typical custom.* You also have to determine what things you can correct yourself and what you might need a professional for.* If we had reduced the offer on the boat we bought by the cost of every single thing that needed dealing with, particularly the exterior cosmetic issues, the seller would never have accepted the offer.
But the boat was priced pretty fairly for the market at that time.* Not that we had the experience to know this, but in addition to our broker's advice we also had the advice of a good friend we took with us to California to look at and sea trial the boat with us and be present during the surveys.* Our friend has been an engineer in the marine industry for over 40 years and has had a vast experience with the type of boat we were looking at, and he didn't care if we bought it or not.* He advised us about things that didn't look so great but were well within our capabilities even then to deal with ourselves.* And he also advised on about issues that we would need a professional to deal with.* As did the hull and engine surveyors we hired.* The seller was willing to reduce the price because the autopilot was inoperative and would require x-amount of dollars to repair, but we didn't ask him to reduce the price because most of the exterior teak trim needed refinishing.
The bottom line is that you generally get what you pay for.* Sure, one can luck out and find a great boat that a widow is trying to sell just to get rid of it after her husband's death.* But for the most part, boats generally sell for what they should sell for.* The exceptions in today's market might be the really high-end boats, boats that start out a six or seven hundred grand and when they don't sell the price gets slashed by ten grand or so, and maybe in a few months another ten grand comes off.* But I guess this really isn't all that different from the seller of an $80,000 boat reducing the price by three or four thousand in the hopes of encouraging a sale.
If you don't care all that much about a particular boat, sure, you can try to knock the offer down a lot.* It might be accepted, it might not.* But if you are negotiating over a boat that you really do like and want, you will find that while there is always some wiggle room, you'll have to be willing to pay what it's honestly worth if you seriously want the boat.
*