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Country is Germany, in case that’s even relevant.

Some fifteen years ago my parents bought a property together with one of my brothers (referred to as “brother A” further down) and his wife (so each of the four owned a quarter). My father has passed away a while ago, and his share went to my mother. My mother, who wasn’t too keen on the whole idea in the first place, wants to move to a small city apartment. Apart from everything else it does not make sense for her to pay two thirds of her pension towards a mortgage for a house (half of it, anyway) that is far too large for a 75 year old woman to maintain.

Her idea is to give away the house (including the remaining mortgage) as a “living inheritance”, if that is the correct term. This would make us remaining three brothers proud owners of one eighth of a house each, which is rather useless. So brother A suggested to sit down with us and make an offer for our share in the house, so he can pay us out and own the whole thing.

If truth is to be told, we three brothers are quite happy with almost any solution as long as we won’t inherit any of the debt. So we do not necessarily want to spend much money on an expert to evaluate the value of the property (we are aware that a living inheritance has other legal concerns that need looking after). On the other hand we think it will help to avoid tensions in the future if we are sure that brother A’s offer was fair, so we are looking at a way to arrive at a ballpark figure.

If that makes any difference we are not so much interested in the value of the house, and more interested as to what goes into arriving at a fair offer. We broadly assume factors will include the original price of the house, current market price, the part of the mortgage that already has been paid, remaining mortgage and possibly other factors. Any advice on this would be welcome.

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    How much does a sworn valuation cost in Germany?
    – Lawrence
    Jan 29, 2019 at 15:34
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    You and your 2 brothers would each own 1/6 of the house, not 1/8. (1/3 of your mother's 1/2 share.)
    – chepner
    Jan 29, 2019 at 18:08
  • Hire an appraiser. Jan 31, 2019 at 2:43

2 Answers 2

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Any estate agent will happily value a house for you at no cost, in the hope of getting to sell it. It won’t be entirely accurate, because the only way to value a house accurately is to sell it and see how much you can get, but it will be better than your own guesstimate.

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    Do you have particular knowledge of Germany? I think their housing market is quite different to either the UK or the USA. Dec 30, 2017 at 11:47
  • @GaneshSittampalam I am from Germany and can confirm this. In addition to real estate agents, you can also get your bank to evaluate a real estate property for free by saying that you consider taking a mortgage on it.
    – Philipp
    Feb 5, 2018 at 22:20
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    @Philipp Now that is different from the UK, where banks charge a fee for mortgage valuations.
    – Mike Scott
    Feb 6, 2018 at 6:56
  • Careful if it is called "mortgage valuation". A mortgage valuation may tell you who much of a mortgage a bank would give you, which may be quite a bit less than the value. Or if you let an insurance company value it, they wouldn't include the value of the land.
    – gnasher729
    Jan 5, 2021 at 11:46
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Depends on how much work you want to do.

The easiest way, is to take the price of the property at purchase, and multiply it by the ratio of the current average property price for [your town] and the average price at time of purchase (google can help you here). So if you bought it for 100k, and the average price has gone up by 10%, the current value is probably around 110k.

This won't be hugely accurate, because prices are fractal - a new shop built at the end of the street will affect prices on that street only, without shifting the average. So getting an accurate price will require research into recent events in your area, prices of nearby properties, changes in availability and quality of nearby properties... etc.

However, I'd worry more about the legal side. When you sell a property (or part of one) that you own, you are liable to capital gains tax, which is based on the difference between the selling price and buying price. This will be country specific, so you should consult a lawyer - you may find that increasing the price you sell for by X amount will put you over a cutoff and increase your tax liability by more than X.

Also worth checking, is whether your mother will have to pay tax when she gives it away. Again, I don't know about germany, but in the UK if you give away a property as a gift, you still have to pay the government capital gains tax on the difference between what you bought it for, and it's current value, even though you are not getting anything for giving it away.

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  • I don't think your point about the tax cutoff is correct. With marginal tax rates, it's not possible to increase your income by X and have your tax liability increase by more than X. When you cross a tax bracket threshold, only the income above that threshold gets taxed at the increased rate, not the whole amount. Jan 30, 2019 at 19:27
  • @NuclearWang You're mostly right, although a higher rate taxpayer pays twice as much capital gains as a basic rate taxpayer - which means (depending on amounts) bumping your salary by a few hundred (to cross the bounds) could cost you thousands in CG tax. But the important point to take away is: Consult a tax advisor! Tax law is complicated, no matter what country you're in.
    – Benubird
    Jan 31, 2019 at 9:56

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