FeaturedFor saleFor sale by owner- 145 m²Internal area
- 3Bedrooms
- FreeholdTenure
- 2009Year built
Key facts
| Property type | Maisonette |
|---|---|
| Tenure | Freehold |
| Bedrooms | 3 |
| Internal area | 145 m² |
| Year built | 2009 |
| Location | Żebbuġ |
About the property
Bright corner maisonette, 145 m² plus own roof with country views. Three double bedrooms, two bathrooms, open-plan kitchen/living. Freehold — no ground rent. Five minutes from the pjazza. Sensible offers considered; viewing by appointment.
🤖 AI-generated example listing while we fill up with real ads — they are coming soon.
Price information
Attachments and documents
- 📄 Planning-permit status — not uploaded yet, ask the seller for it
- 📄 Tenure / ground-rent (ċens) paperwork — not uploaded yet, ask the seller for it
- 📄 Energy certificate — not uploaded yet, ask the seller for it
The seller must hand the buyer the energy performance certificate (EPC) by the promise of sale, and buyers should verify planning-permit compliance. Uploading of the seller's own documents is coming; until then the seller shares them directly.
Buying from a private individual?
This home is for sale by owner (private sale) — without an estate agent. In Malta the notary does the legal heavy lifting in every sale: title searches, the konvenju and the final deed. There is no agent vetting the marketing information, so ask for the EPC, check planning permits, and consider a buyer's architect inspection — the statutory latent-defects warranty for immovables is one year. Nothing binds either side until the konvenju is signed.
Information, not legal advice. Monti is an intermediary — not a party to the transaction.
🛡️ Important about private home sales — read in full
- Monti is an intermediary / marketplace — not a party to the transaction. We publish the listing and give you tools. We are neither seller, buyer nor estate agent, and we never handle the settlement.
- The one-year latent-defects warranty applies both ways. Under the Civil Code the buyer can claim against you for hidden defects for one year from the contract — whether you sell yourself or through an agent. Describe the property honestly and disclose known defects.
- Self-selling means no licensed agent in the middle. No PMA-licensed professional markets the property, screens buyers or steers the process for you. The notary still verifies title and publishes the deed in every sale — but negotiation, viewings and paperwork are yours alone.
- Get the EPC, and consider a pre-sale survey. The energy performance certificate is the seller's to procure and its rating belongs in the ad. A voluntary architect's survey documents the property's condition and helps prevent defect claims later.
- The final deed is signed before a notary. The notary verifies title, registers the deed and pays the duties. Never transfer money directly to a private account — the konvenju deposit is commonly held in notarial escrow.
- The home must have a valid energy certificate. The Norwegian energy-labelling regulation (energimerkeforskriften), supervised by NVE (the Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate), requires an energy certificate when selling a home. You can register it yourself, for free, via Enova's energy-labelling portal.
This is information, not legal advice. If in doubt, talk to an estate agent or a lawyer.
💰 Offers
Making an offer here is not binding — in Malta nothing binds either side until the promise of sale (konvenju) is signed, usually before a notary and with a ~10% deposit. Use offers to negotiate; the seller can accept, decline or counter.
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