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What Is A Reserve Price? | Property Auctions

Property Auctions: The Reserve Price Explained

  1. Andy Thompson is the Head of Auctions (North West) for SDL Auctions who sell a wide range of residential and commercial properties on behalf of both private individuals and corporate clients across the UK.

At a property auction, there is a guide price and a reserve price. A guide price is what a buyer will see in the auction catalogue and is a guide to the value of the sale. The reserve price is set by the seller and represents the minimum that they are willing to sell for.

What Is A Reserve Price?

Andy: A reserve price is set by (or on behalf of) the seller and the guide price is for the buyer. So, when you are looking through the auction catalogue, there will be a guide price. It will either be a banded guide price, or it might be between £50k to £60k or more.

That’s the price that Joe Public sees. Obviously, you don’t know what price the bidding is going to finish on in the room, but that guide price is there for the buyers, to give them an idea.

The seller, however, will have a reserve price, which is confidential. This is to give them a bit of security.

The buyer will never know what that figure for the reserve price is, but it is the minimum price that we can sell the property for.

So, if you were selling a property, and you went to auction, and the guide price was 50k, you might say, “I can’t let it sell for anything less than 55”. So, in this case, we’d set the reserve at 55. Then you, as the buyer, know that we’re not going ring you up and say, “It’s gone for 10 grand”, for example.

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