Two-bed terraced investment with no onward chain — requires modernisation..
Two self-contained flats — immediate rental or multi‑occupancy potential
No onward chain — straightforward purchase process
Two double bedrooms and two reception rooms, compact layout
Small, shared garden and side access, not a private plot
Requires modernisation — dated kitchen, bathrooms, likely insulation work
Built c.1900–1929 with solid brick walls; potential thermal upgrades needed
High local crime and very deprived area — affects resale and tenant mix
Excellent mobile signal and fast broadband; good transport links
This mid-terrace Victorian property on High Road, Willenhall, is offered freehold with no onward chain — a straightforward purchase for buyers seeking rental income or a renovation project. The house is currently configured as two self-contained flats (ground-floor and upper-floor layouts), giving immediate flexibility for let-with-occupier income or conversion back to a single family home.
The accommodation is compact but useable: two double bedrooms upstairs, a shower room, two reception rooms and a small kitchen. Services are conventional mains gas heating with boiler and radiators, double glazing (install date unknown) and fast broadband/mobile signal — practical for tenants or owners. The plot is small with a shared paved garden and side access rather than a private lawn.
The property will suit investors or hands-on buyers prepared to modernise. It’s a period stock property with solid brick walls and likely little insulation; internal fittings and some surfaces are dated and the kitchen and bathrooms will benefit from upgrading. The house lies in an area of higher crime and significant deprivation; that affects rental demand and resale values but also keeps purchase prices low and yields potentially attractive for buy-to-let.
In short: a large-footprint-for-type terraced house in a busy location, currently subdivided for income and sold with vacant-chain advantage. Buyers should factor in refurbishment costs and the local social context when assessing rental prospects or family use.