Guide Price: KSh 600,000
25% below estimate2.96 Acre Agricultural Parcel in Bunyala
Bunyala, Busia
land · 3 acres
Clearly labelled opportunity
View detailsCHERU PROPERTY OPPORTUNITIES
Auction, bank sale and private treaty listings.
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1 auction opportunity matching your search
Guide Price: KSh 600,000
25% below estimateBunyala, Busia
land · 3 acres
Clearly labelled opportunity
View detailsBuyer questions
Clear answers for buyers reviewing auction, private treaty, bank sale, and other time-sensitive property routes.
An auction property is a property offered for sale through a public or scheduled auction process instead of the usual private negotiation between a buyer and seller. In many cases, the sale is handled by an appointed auctioneer on behalf of a lender, bank, court, estate, company, or private owner. The property may have a guide price, reserve price, auction date, deposit requirement, and specific sale conditions. Before bidding, buyers should confirm the auction terms, viewing access, title details, and payment timelines.
Sale by private treaty means the property is being offered through direct negotiation rather than a public auction. It is often used where a seller, lender, receiver, or representative wants to invite serious offers without running a formal auction on a specific date. The process can still be time-sensitive, and buyers should confirm the asking price, accepted offer process, deposit terms, documents required, and completion timelines.
No. Cheru does not conduct auctions, receive bids, hold deposits, or decide sale terms. Cheru helps organise and present available property information so buyers can review opportunities more clearly. Auction participation, deposits, sale agreements, and final terms are handled by the appointed auctioneer, lender, seller, advocate, receiver, or other authorised representative.
Sometimes, but not always. Auction and time-sensitive sales can attract buyers because the guide price may appear lower than comparable market listings. However, the final price depends on the reserve price, competition from other buyers, the condition of the property, legal position, and the seller’s terms. A low guide price should be treated as a starting point for proper checks, not a guarantee of a bargain.
A guide price is an indicative price used to help buyers understand the expected sale range or starting point. It is not always the final selling price. The actual accepted price may be higher or lower depending on the reserve price, bidding activity, seller instructions, and sale conditions.
A reserve price is the minimum price the seller or lender is willing to accept. If bidding does not reach the reserve price, the property may not be sold, even if there are interested buyers. In some cases the reserve price is not publicly disclosed, so buyers should confirm the terms before attending an auction or making an offer.
TBA means the auction date has not yet been announced or confirmed. This can happen where the auctioneer, lender, court, seller, or representative is still finalising the sale process. Buyers can still review the property details, but they should check again later or request updates before making plans.
In many cases, viewing may be possible, but it is not always as straightforward as a normal listing. Some properties may be occupied, access may be limited, or viewing may be arranged only through the appointed party. Cheru can help present the available viewing information, but buyers should confirm access before relying on a property visit.
Buyers should confirm the title position, ownership details, auction terms, deposit requirement, reserve price where available, property condition, viewing access, occupation status, completion timelines, and any legal or financial obligations attached to the sale. It is wise to involve a qualified advocate or property professional before making a financial commitment.
Cheru is not the auctioneer and does not conduct auctions. Property details, auction terms, deposit requirements, reserve prices, viewing arrangements, and final sale conditions should be confirmed with the appointed auctioneer, lender, seller, advocate, receiver, or legal representative before bidding or making an offer.