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Scottish government launches national scheme to match empty homes with buyers and developers

A new online portal has been launched by the Scottish government in an attempt to bring owners of empty homes together with prospective buyers or developers.

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Mairi McAllan
Màiri McAllan, housing secretary, said the scheme aims to make “best use of existing housing stock” (picture: Alamy)
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LinkedIn IHA new online portal has been launched by the Scottish government in an attempt to bring owners of empty homes together with prospective buyers or developers #UKhousing

Covering the whole of Scotland, the scheme builds on the success of local pilots, referred to as “matchmaker schemes”, which allow owners of empty homes to upload details of their properties to a website.

This can then be accessed by first-time buyers, families, developers or local authorities, who can make purchasing enquiries.

The local pilots that currently exist in Aberdeenshire, the Borders, Fife, East Lothian, Argyll and Bute, Orkney and South Ayrshire will now be wound down in place of this new national portal. Aberdeen City, however, will continue its local scheme.


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Màiri McAllan, housing secretary, said: “If you have an empty home to sell, this new portal is for you.

“Making best use of existing housing stock is central to tackling the housing emergency. Bringing owners and buyers together is a great way of adding to the overall housing supply, be that for affordable housing or use on the private market, and it complements our ambitious housebuilding programme.

“We are already making progress in turning around empty properties. Over the past 15 years we have helped return almost 13,000 privately owned homes to use, and last year we saw 2,066 homes brought back in a single year, the highest in a year to date.  

“I would encourage anyone who has a home lying empty to use this new scheme.”

The portal is hosted by the Scottish Empty Homes Partnership and has been developed as part of a £2m investment this year to recruit additional empty homes officers and fund initiatives that will accelerate the pace and numbers of empty homes brought back into use.

Tahmina Nizam, Scottish Empty Homes Partnership national manager, said: “Every home matters in our collective fight against the housing emergency, so we’re delighted to launch this brand-new matchmaker scheme. 

“We know selling an empty home can be a daunting task; the matchmaker scheme is designed to make that process easier and to help get more homes back into productive use.

“We want anyone who owns an empty home to know that support is available, either from the network of dedicated local empty homes officers working in local authorities across the country or directly from the Scottish Empty Homes Partnership. 

“No home was built to sit empty and it’s vital that we make the best possible use of the assets we already have. Every individual empty property could provide a safe and secure place for someone to call home, but collectively Scotland’s empty homes can make a huge contribution to ending the housing emergency.” 

Under the Housing (Scotland) Act 2006, it is a legal requirement for any property which is being actively marketed for sale to have a home report.

Owners can list their property on the new portal without a home report, but must not enter any negotiations with potential purchasers prior to obtaining one. If a property is for sale through an estate agent, the asking price must not diverge from what is included on the portal.


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