NTSEAT

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    Agents asked to comment on portal ‘material information’ ahead of guidelines

    Trading Standards wants to know industry's views as it prepares to bolt down minimum information agents must upload to portals.

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    Estate agents face mandatory referral fee transparency rules following shock report

    Trading Standards has concluded its investigation into referral fees and recommended agents are forced to comply or face expulsion.

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    Letting or selling a property? You’ll soon have to reveal its pollution levels

    The air that your buyers or tenants breathe will soon be measured and listed within property details.

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    ‘We’ll intervene when councils won’t prosecute rogue letting agents’, says NTSEAT boss

    James Munro says he wants to reassure agents that NTSEAT wants to end the uneven policing of letting agents that the industry has complained about.

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    EXCLUSIVE: Trading Standards to halt agents charging pet rent if legal advice goes its way

    The National Trading Standards Estate Agency Team (NTSEAT) has sought legal advice on whether agents can charge higher rents or additional ‘rent premiums’ for tenants who have pets, and a decision is likely next week, The Negotiator has been told. As we have reported before, many agents have been charging up to £50 a month or £600 a year as a ‘rent premium’ to tenants who have dogs or cats. This has been prompted by the tenant fees ban legislation in England and Wales, which capped rental deposits at five week’s rent for most tenancies, and six weeks’ rent for those over £50,000 a year. “This has caused some issues especially with problem properties and tenants where agents have always quite rightly said that they wanted larger deposits because it’s very difficult getting money back from people after they have moved on,” says James Munro, Senior Manager at NTSEAT (left). “So they want to ensure they have a contingency if there are problems during the tenancy. “They are saying five weeks’ deposit isn’t enough now, and understandably they are trying different ways of trying to deal with this. “But we’re not entirely happy with this because we think it’s something…

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    ‘Be more transparent about referral fees or face prosecutions or even a ban’

    Warning comes in latest advice from a senior legal expert at the National Trading Standards Estate Agency Team

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    Referral fees are under threat

    The National Trading Standards Estate Agency Team (NTSEAT) has today launched a survey to find out how widespread the use of referral fees from solicitors, surveyors, financial advisors and removal firms is among estate agents. It says the results of the survey will be fed into the Government’s ongoing investigation into referral fees. The survey asks agents to anonymously divulge whether they take such fees from these kinds of third parties, and whether they think referral fees should be retained, made more transparent, or banned. NTSEAT’s survey has the backing of both The Property Ombudsman and the Property Redress Scheme and follows the government’s recent call for evidence by a working group set up by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government. “The responses [so far] to whether government should take further action to enforce current transparency regulations regarding the disclosure of referral fees were overwhelmingly supportive,” says James Munro, Head of NTSEAT (pictured, left) “But at the inaugural meeting, it was decided that more information was required from agents about the nature of the fees they currently receive. The results of this survey will feed into the working group.” Reassurance Agents who think it might be a bad idea…

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    ‘Do I really have to join one of the redress schemes?’

    Confusion among sales and letting agents about who has to register with one of the three redress schemes has prompted the National Trading Standards Estate Agency Team (NTSEAT) to issue new advice. Team leader James Munro says that although it is already a legal requirement for anyone engaged in residential estate agency to be a member of an approved scheme, he says there have been requests to “clarify” what this means. It might seem an easy enough definition to grasp, but the subtleties of the sector have led several agents to wonder if they really have to join one of the schemes, which are Ombudsman Services: Property, the Property Redress Scheme and The Property Ombudsman. James says the NTSEAT now wants to make it clear that the definition covers any agency that ‘engages in estate agency work’ and ‘deals in residential property’ and that by residential he means ‘land that consists of or includes part of a building’. The list of questions that agents have asked include whether they have to join if they only sell off-plan property (they do) and if individual members of staff have to join a redress scheme (they don’t, only the company they work for has to). Also,…

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    Trading Standards backs TPO stance on portal juggling

    The National Trading Standards Agency Estate Agency Team (NTSEAT) has waded into the issue of portal juggling with a resounding thumbs up for The Property Ombudsman’s imminent changes to its guidance. James Munro, who leads the NTSEAT, today said that he welcomed the TPO’s new guidance, which will be published on Saturday. It is likely to prevent TPO member agents from misleading consumers by removing and re-listing homes on property portals, enabling them to hide price cuts and make properties appear new to the market when they are not. Munro said he believes many agents do this to “manipulate sales figures” and that the new TPO guidelines could, he says, “lead to a ruling by the Ombudsman and also referral to enforcement agencies such as NTSEAT and local trading standards authorities”. “Such referrals could lead to prohibition orders or prosecution,” he added, and that “we will continue to work closely with industries bodies to stop this unfair practice, which misleads prospective homebuyers and harms honest estate agents who conduct their business in a fair and professional way.” One agent The Negotiator spoke to, who wished to remain anonymous, pointed out that although “unscrupulous”, it was a practice created in part…

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