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A home away from home; Americans finding it easier to buy in some foreign countries
by Pamela Dittmer McKuen
05/07/06
American retirees and vacationers have long staked out second
homes in the sunny climates of Arizona and Florida. Today, however,
many are traversing beyond the borders to buy property in other
countries.
"We have seen substantial increases in investment purchases
and residential development in foreign jurisdictions over the past
five years," said Mitch Creekmore, senior vice president of
Houston-based Stewart International, which guarantees title in
35 countries.
Many countries have become increasingly welcoming of American
investments and have streamlined the processes, he said.
Among the hot spots: Mexico, because it's nearby, and Panama,
which has a dollar-based economy. Europe is popular but pricey,
he said.
An early pioneer was author Frances Mayes, who restored an Italian
villa 15 years ago and chronicled the joys and frustrations of
doing so in her best-selling book and a movie, "Under the
Tuscan Sun."
"When I bought my house, I didn't know anyone who had done
anything that crazy," she said. "Now lots of people do."
Some countries are attractive because dollars go further, said
Jeff Hornberger, international market development manager for the
National Association of Realtors in Chicago.
"Someone who wants a second home can go to Sarasota or Tampa
and get something on the beach for $400,000 or $500,000," he
said. "If you spend two more hours on the plane, you can get
something nice in Panama for $200,000."
But caveats abound. Buyers have lost their homes when ownership
wasn't cleared or building permits were improperly granted. Financing
is rare and public services may be erratic. Just getting to some
of these places takes a day of travel.
"These are different countries," said Hornberger. "They
speak different languages and have different ways of getting things
done. They're not on American time."
In Mexico, for example, beaches, the Baja Peninsula and other
desirable areas are considered restricted zones. Non-Mexican nationals
can buy, but the property must be held in a Mexican bank trust
called a fideicomiso. It's similar to an estate trust in the U.S.
Chicago real estate broker Sean Conlon of Sussex & Reilly
Century 21 bought a flat in London and a country home near Wexford,
Ireland. In London, he also had to buy a lease, which was negotiated
separately. In Ireland, he learned that his driveway crossed part
of a neighbor's land, so he bought that too.
Standards of luxury are different, Mayes said.
"Sometimes people get into old houses in the country and
freak out because bees are coming in the windows," she said.
The reliability of utilities depends on the area, said Denver-based
developer John Fair of Fair Enterprises, which is building a 1,700-acre
community, Paraiso del Mar, in La Paz, Mexico.
"In hurricane areas, people know to have back-up generators," he
said. "In Mexico, it depends on where you are. The power is
more consistent in La Paz by far than in Turks & Caicos" in
the Caribbean.
As for financing, cash is king. A handful of American and European
lenders make loans in select locales, especially Mexico, but might
not accept the property you're buying as collateral.
You'll bypass some of the challenges by buying into planned communities
from reputable developers who have worked through the nuances of
ownership, understand American expectations and may offer financing.
Another advantage: Your home is serviced through the likes of
a homeowners association while you're away, said developer David
Burden, chief executive of Timbers Co. in Carbondale, Colo.
"You can be private but you're not alone," he said.
Timbers is developing Castello di Casole, a project that includes
transforming a centuries-old castle into a hotel and restoring
35 villas surrounded by vineyards and olive groves in Tuscany.
Fractional and whole ownership starts at $600,000.
Paraiso del Mar, on the eastern side of the Baja Peninsula, will
have condominiums, single-family homes, a hotel and golf course
as well as a power plant. Prices range from the high $100,000s
to $600,000.
Chicagoan Bruce Turner, whose Paraiso del Mar home will be delivered
in about two years, said that planned communities offer greater
security.
"If the boat goes down, I'm not going to be the only one
going down," he said.
To buy an existing home, you'll find plenty of real estate brokers,
but their service varies. Multiple listing services, comparable
sales figures and disclosure laws are rare.
When Mayes bought, her broker's sole contribution was introducing
her to the owner of the property.
"There was only one real estate agent" in the village,
she said. "Now there must be 20. They are more helpful, but
there are no inspections or declarations as to what is wrong. You
can ask the agent to help you get somebody to look it over, but
it is `as is.' The owner is not going to be fixing the leak in
the fountain."
Because few American brokers escort buyers abroad to shop and
negotiate transactions, your best bet is a referral to a broker
in your chosen country, said Hornberger.
The National Association of Realtors has a directory of 1,500
brokers worldwide who have received its designation, Certified
International Property Specialist, on its Web site, realtor.org/international.
Global realty specialists also are listed on the Web sites of
the International Real Estate Federation in Paris, fiabci.com,
and the International Consortium of Real Estate Associations in
Chicago, worldproperties.com.
Rodney Dillard, president of Illustrated Properties International
in Palm Beach, Fla., specializes in private islands in the Bahamas
and Caribbean. Business has surged as Florida has undergone massive
development, he said.
"Ideally, you'd like to have a private island not too far
from a major airport and not too far from the place where you would
take a boat to go shopping and equip the island," he said. "The
more remote and more difficult to get to, the price is generally
lower."
Prices also tend to be lower in the Bahamas, where islands are
more plentiful than in the Caribbean, he said.
February's inventory was about two dozen islands. The least expensive
was a three-acre island with home and dock near Curacao for just
under $2 million. The most expensive was a vacant 700-acre island
in the Bahamas for $23 million.
If you plan to build, be sure that the local government allows
it and keep in mind that construction costs run two to three times
higher than on the mainland, he said.
In fact, building or remodeling anywhere is tricky.
"A hundred different things could jump up, from bad title
to bad contractors stealing your money or not getting proper permits," said
Fair.
"Some people buy sites that are ruined and the contractor
says they can be rebuilt and then they find out water and sewer
services aren't coming for several years," said Burden.
Before buying outside the country, investigate thoroughly. Visit
the places you're interested in and talk to Americans who have
bought or built there. Internet forums such as those on internationalliving.com
help forge connections.
"At the end of the day, who is the one who has to ask the
questions and perform due diligence? The buyer," said Creekmore,
co-author of the book "Cashing in on a Second Home in Mexico" (Crabman
Publishing, 2005).
Turner's travels helped shape his decision. To him, the Los Cabos
area seems too touristy, and he prefers the quieter gulf side of
the peninsula to the exposed ocean side.
Rent before you buy, said Mayes, who'd been to Italy numerous
times before zeroing in on her purchase.
"It's a different kind of experience," she said. "I'm
not saying give up hotels, but your whole relation to the culture
changes when you rent a house. When you have a kitchen and buy
a local cookbook and meet your neighbors and they invite you over
for a drink, things begin to happen that don't happen when you
stay in a hotel."
Mayes' latest book, "A Year in the World," (Broadway
Books, 2006) was released in March.
"The worst thing you can do is buy on the Internet," said
Conlon. Photographs "may not show you the garbage dump that
lies behind your property."
But that's what Greg Pitts and Betsy Donnelly of Kansas City,
Kan., did. Pitts was flipping through eBay auctions four years
ago when he spotted a five-bedroom oceanfront home with guesthouse
in Rio de Janeiro. He fell in love with the photos and put in the
winning bid of $80,000.
"It was the craziest, most spontaneous thing we've ever done," said
Donnelly, his significant other. "We'd never even been to
Brazil, but we couldn't have afforded anything like that in this
country."
Since then the couple has visited several times. Pitts is learning
to speak Portuguese, and Donnelly navigates the local terrain.
Among their highlights: lounging on their patio and watching the
frolicking whales.
Donnelly admits the methodology is daring.
"I think we were just lucky, and I would never recommend
anyone doing what we did," she said. "Having said that,
we've had a marvelous experience."
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