Don’t be misled by property blurbs | This is Money
An estate agent, Bonett's in Brighton, has started describing houses on its books in the form of Japanese haiku poems to make them stand out.
Another agent, Geering & Colyer, caused nationwide astonishment at the end of last year by advertising an 'exceptional detached fisherman's cottage', while neglecting to mention the Dungeness nuclear power station a couple of hundred yards away.
At the same time, consumer experts are saying that the Property Misdescriptions Act 1991 (PMA), which was meant to prevent estate agents writing misleading details, is still the source of confusion, and it may be scrapped.
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