I don,t think you are trying to mislead anyone but I think you are making a mistake like a lot of other people in that they lump all former communist countries together. Romania had a severe earthquake in the 70's and since then the building requirements have been very harsh. They still look like old and ugly communist blocks but I can tell you from personal experiance they are built like the rock of Gibralter. Even amongst communist countries Romania is always different. I've been in a number of these older blocks and people have done them up very nicely inside and it is a lot cheaper to buy these and do them up then to buy the ones available off plan and recently built. You must have some contacts to do nearlyh everything in Romania even to do these apartments up. I would also like to refer to the person who said there are no cheap flights into Romania, I don't know where they get this nonsense try Wizz Air they fly into the country side of Romania as well.
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Originally Posted by sun321
My experience in investing in a former communist country has been limited to Latvia. The latvian property market has been booming since joining the EU. Prices for apartments are now ridiculous for a number of reasons. A lot of people have bought apartments in state owned buildings, there apartments are now maybe worth maybe 150,000 EUR market price for a 2 room apartment, however one can only insure these apartments for contents insurance as the building is owned by the local govt authority, what happens when the building burns down ? The local authorities that own these buildings cant even maintain them properly let alone compensate everyone market price for their apartments but still people keep paying these stupid prices. Secondly a lot of the apartment blocks built in the communist era during 60's, 1970's were only built to last 25 years they are pre-fab concrete structures a lot of them have concrete cancer you can see the steel re-inforcing exposed to the elements and rusting away but still people spend thousands on internal renovations thinking these buildings will last forever. No one thinks long term in these countries its live fast, look good and make a quick buck and its all built on false economies, a lot of the inflated property pricing in latvia has been blamed on money launders, these are not realistic prices as most people here make 15-20% of a western european salary, so renting a property out once you have bought it, is difficult as well. I would assume Romania would have similair problems except I think things there are still a bit more behind the baltic states so that means more red-tape and booby traps await the uneducated or naive buyer.
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