Buying a property: why two identical apartments don’t hold the same value
Two apartments may appear identical — yet their real value can differ profoundly.
What the market doesn’t show is often what defines the outcome.
Acquisition is the core of what we do. It is also the decision where the most capital is committed on the least complete reading: a property is viewed in an hour, financed over twenty years, and reveals its constraints long after signature.
We step in before that imbalance — so that you decide knowing exactly what you are buying.
Case study — family apartment, Paris 16th
Client seeking a family apartment in the 16th district of Paris.
The identified property presented all the attributes of an immediate emotional appeal:
generous volumes, moldings, high ceilings, and a fluid, well-balanced layout.
In a competitive market, the asset met all the criteria for a quick acquisition — both for the buyer and for a traditional transactional agency.
Our reading surfaced what neither the viewing nor the file disclosed.
A façade renovation not yet voted by the co-ownership, but likely within a few years given the state of the building and its maintenance cycle. No minutes mention it today; the charge will come all the same.
Fresh paint on a single wall — the one on the external façade — while the rest of the room would visibly have benefited from a refresh. A repair this localised rarely signals cosmetic care; it often conceals an infiltration treated on the surface, not at its source.
Invisible to those who welcome it, legible to those who know the fabric.
Genuine strengths, for the record: preserved Haussmannian character, coherent layout, generous reception space, sought-after address.
€1,200,000 — perceived as a controlled, move-in ready acquisition
€1,200,000 today
→ Projected total cost: €1,255,000 – €1,305,000
Neither of these two points appears in the documents. One is anticipated, the other detected — both call for a reading of the building fabric that only technical competence makes possible.
A purchase perceived as straightforward can, in reality, carry significant costs if these elements are not anticipated from the outset.
The property remained acquirable — but not at that price, and not before investigating the infiltration. The client renegotiated and decided without bias, with a real view of the cost and the risk.
Our role was not to validate a first impression, but to reframe and objectify the decision: reading the technical and regulatory factors bearing on future value, identifying charges and risks in the short and medium term, revisiting the price in their light.
We deliberately introduced elements likely to slow the decision down — not to complicate it, but to secure it.
| Transactional agency | Finikia approach |
|---|---|
| Favors a quick decision | Favors an informed decision |
| Focuses on visible qualities | Integrates hidden constraints |
| Short-term vision | Global vision (present + future) |
| Objective: close the deal | Objective: to decide well |
You are buying where you will live. The reading weighs the real cost over the medium term as much as the fairness of today’s price.
You are settling in France from abroad. To the reading of the property we add a single point of contact within a fragmented system: notary, tax adviser and financing, coordinated.
You are weighing an allocation. The reading factors in the real yield, the liquidity at resale, and the transformation potential.
The method — the five steps and the verdict in full — is set out in detail on the dedicated page.
Two apartments may appear identical — yet their real value can differ profoundly.
What the market doesn’t show is often what defines the outcome.