I like your videos so far but I would sure like him even more if you would do some kind of investigation on houses in yokosuka, and atsugi maybe Kobe 😊😊
@@hakuba365 good to hear, your views and subscribers will increase, be patient and keep providing useful and insightful content like this. Maybe add a few visuals here and there. Your delivery and tone are very good, personable and sincere. Cheers mate
I think it's crazy how lose the administration in Japan is about boundary, registration or even the succession for an house. An akiya can belong to... a dead person. 😅
Hi there! Just stumbled upon your channel as this is something I am really wanting to do. I had a question about abandoned properties. Is it usually hard to find the owners? And if you are unable to find anyone attached to the property (though I know it would be slim) do you just try and purchase through the local government? Thanks! Looking forward to the rest of the series!
@@patrishaharrigan4466 good question and one I might approach in the next couple videos. Short answer is yes, sometimes it’s very hard or impossible to find the owner. Sometimes the owner has passed away but there is no eminent domain in Japan so ownership doesn’t revert to the government. There are options that I’ll try to get into soon.
Any house built over 20 or 25 years old in Japan. Because of the mold in the walls. Especially in the country side. Pipes are horrible. Don't buy old japanese houses. As he said termites too !
Thank you for the video on Japanese real estate Akiya!
I like your videos so far but I would sure like him even more if you would do some kind of investigation on houses in yokosuka, and atsugi maybe Kobe 😊😊
@@mariondavia8178 I’ll try to look into those areas in some future videos. I hope to analyze some regions throughout Japan.
great video - love the narration, level of detail, pacing - high value.
@@KelvinMeeks thanks! I appreciate the vote of confidence. I’ll keep trying to make them valuable.
This was excellent, very helpful, thanks for making these episodes, cheers!
@@douglascapron9814 thanks. I’m really pleased to hear that these videos are useful. I’ll keep on it.
@@hakuba365 good to hear, your views and subscribers will increase, be patient and keep providing useful and insightful content like this. Maybe add a few visuals here and there. Your delivery and tone are very good, personable and sincere. Cheers mate
I think it's crazy how lose the administration in Japan is about boundary, registration or even the succession for an house.
An akiya can belong to... a dead person. 😅
Yeah, and they don’t even have to pay taxes on it!
Hi there! Just stumbled upon your channel as this is something I am really wanting to do. I had a question about abandoned properties. Is it usually hard to find the owners? And if you are unable to find anyone attached to the property (though I know it would be slim) do you just try and purchase through the local government? Thanks! Looking forward to the rest of the series!
@@patrishaharrigan4466 good question and one I might approach in the next couple videos. Short answer is yes, sometimes it’s very hard or impossible to find the owner. Sometimes the owner has passed away but there is no eminent domain in Japan so ownership doesn’t revert to the government. There are options that I’ll try to get into soon.
@@hakuba365 Thank you!
Any house built over 20 or 25 years old in Japan. Because of the mold in the walls. Especially in the country side. Pipes are horrible. Don't buy old japanese houses. As he said termites too !
@@mitchb4084 yes it’s buyer beware out there!