Work completed with and without Local Council Completion Certificates. Council Tax Indiciator . What might be the best way forward? Thankyou.

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Hi, we are in NW England, please can you help.

We decided to sell our pre-war property, so we visited Gov.uk and noticed a Council Tax Indicator “YES” on the property and want to discover why. Does anybody have any answers, thankyou.

We don't want any holdups with a sale and are wondering what the best way forward might be. Can anybody help in this area?

Over the years we have had work completed with and without Local Council Completion Certificates but always to regulated standards. What might all the implications be for that? What might be the best way forward for the sale?


History:
In 1996 we demolished a lean-to /workshop. Later, in 2000, we replaced that area with the kitchen extension, though it is about 1m x 1m larger surface area due to a porch entrance (“ Full Plans Application” was submitted to the local Council and after building control inspections we gained a completion certificate).

Later still, we submitted a “Full Plans Application” for a Dormer En-suite, however, due to unforeseen circumstances and a lack of funds no work commenced so we did not inform the Building Control Inspector of a start date as instructed on the Plan, and the Plan expired (no work started within the 3-year start date time frame).

Many years later, we upgraded the dusty loft area to a lite storage room, not too much weight up there. We added: a raised subfloor topped with T&G boards with insulation beneath, a reroof with insulation beneath and Velux style windows, extra wall sockets, plasterboarded, and entry is still by a loft hatch with a pulldown ladder and smoke detector. We have no receipts or completion certificates though all work was completed to building regulation standards. We understand we will need the Electrical Installations Condition Report and sellers'/buyers' Indemnity Insurance to cover/guarantee the reroof and subfloor. We didn't realise that completion certificates were needed.

Is there a way of finding out about the Indicator YES without contacting the local council? Recently just before I was about to contact the council I became aware that if any work was completed at any time and we did not have building control inspections it’s best not to contact the local authority as we would not be able to apply for Regularisation or Indemnity Insurance and will need to comply to their recommendations and remove part or all of the completed work.

Thankyou for your time.
 
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The wording below is what i have found on the internet for you...

"If the improvement indicator is 'yes', it means that the council VOA are aware that the current owners have carried out some fairly major improvements to the property (e.g. added an extension, converted the garage into living accomodation etc). For council tax banding purposes these improvements are ignored until the property is next sold, at which point the council tax band will be reassessed and may be raised as a result of the improvements made."

So that sort of means that you will not have a problem personally with the Council Tax rising but anyone who buys it will probably have it reassessed and have to pay a higher rate than is currently being charged. Not really a deal breaker for most people so i wouldn't worry about it.
As for the works you have had done, they are Certificates for the distant improvements so all good there and any subsequent internal improvements such as the loft would not really raise any major concerns but it would not be classed as a bedroom due to no staircase and could be marketed as a "loft room storage space" for example. If you have the EICR etc done you have ticked those boxes but you will need an EPC too.
I would tell the Estate Agent that you were granted Planning for the dormer even though it lapsed as it shows that it would likely be approved again should a new buyer wish to do so and is a good selling point, especially as you have a set of drawings, calcs etc you could pass on.
 
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