business for sale kawartha lakes

profile and would like to know more. Ken the Handyman, Experence Handyman Door Installation And Repair Drywall Installation And Repair Flooring Installation And Repair Gutter Cleaning And Repair Storage Area Construction and Repair Waste And Junk Removal 24 Hour Emergency Service Notes made here will only be seen by you. If you want to message the owner of this listing Send Them A Message I Need a Handyman I Am a Handyman King Handyman Services, Inc. Call today for a free quote Mrs Fix It and The Camo Man S&S Lawn Care And MoreWelcome to NewDeal Kawartha Lakes Realty Inc., your source for real estate in the Kawartha Lakes region. If you own real estate that you're thinking of selling, we would be happy to provide you with a FREE Home Evaluation. In today's competitive real estate market, timing is everything. Many good homes are sold before they are ever advertised. Beat other homebuyers to the hottest new homes for sale in the Kawarthas with our New Listings Notification.

Whether you are buying or selling a home, we want to earn your business. You are invited you to contact us as we'd be happy to assist you with this important transaction. In addition, if you have any general questions about buying or selling real estate in Ontario, please contact us as we're more than willing to help. Please browse our website for listings, reports and important local real estate information. Sincerely, Tom Wood, Broker of RecordKelly James,Sales Representative NewDeal Kawartha Lakes Realty Inc. Brokerage Find the latest Online and Print local classified listings. Listings include online classifieds as well as newspaper print ads. Services (30)Animal ServicesBusiness OpportunitiesBusiness ServicesCareer CounselingCareer TrainingFlooring and CarpetingHandypersonHealth & Beauty ServicesHome & Garden ServicesHome ImprovementsMedical & DentalSchools Real Estate (22)CommercialFor RentMerchandise (38)Art & CollectiblesArticles for SaleClothingElectronicsHome & GardenSports & LeisureTools & EquipmentCommunity (30)Community NoticesEventsLost & FoundVolunteers

Pets (2)Pet OthersGarage Sales & Auctions (15)AuctionsGarage SalesHaving lived in Peterborough for the past 25 years, I have been involved in various retail, hospitality and service industries. I have managed and operated various businesses, and have set up and successfully built my own businesses to succeed in competitive markets. Working in the real estate industry since 1989, I have been involved in both residential and commercial properties, but commercial property has been my main focus. I have intensive access to various properties in Ontario, i.e. hotels, plazas, gas stations, restaurants, and leasing vacant commercial properties. My extensive experience can help you with any of your real estate needs, or if you require information regarding franchises, please feel free to call me."Kelly Mann is a hard working professional that I would highly recommend. I found him to be trustworthy. He explained the process. He listened and understood our specific needs."All of 6 listings

6 photos available1447 WATER ST ST # 1Approximately 1200 sq.ft. store front on very busy street, close to Trent University. 4 store plaza, excellent for many uses. Space subdivides into different sections....$1,70000View Listing4 photos available107 HUNTER ST # UPPERApproximately 2650 sq.ft. Close to shopping, coffee shop and restuarants.
blessed hands handyman servicesPart of space is divided for offices.
handyman service san antonio txLarge windows, very open...$2,50000View Listing12 photos available320 WATER ST # 73Excellent downtown Bar & Restaurant next to Cinemas.
handyman price list londonLicensed for 88 people inside and 40 seats on the patio, open to outside clients as well....$99,00000View Listing10 photos available116 PARKHILL RD E # 342 seat licenced restaurant, breakfast, lunch & dinner menu.
business for sale zug

Equipment only 7 yrs old. Documents available to serious buyers after procuring offer....$132,00000View Listing2 photos available646 DRUM RDBeautiful 2 store investment property, approx. 1800 sq.ft. One tenant - LCBO, 2nd tenant - Pharmacy. Leases net net to Landlord. Tenants pay their own...$299,00000View Listing14 photos available232 JOHN ST4 nozzle XTR self serve gas station.
business for sale aylmer ontarioSeparate island for diesel with 2 nozzles.
handyman services iowa city3 fiberglass double wall tanks. Excellent Country Style Restaurant with 18...$975,00000View Listing No properties were found matching your criteria, please broaden your search using the options at the left“I have nothing on my plate any more. Last year was a boom year. I sold everything,” says Prince Edward County Realtor Lori Slik.)

Prince Edward County realtor Lori Slik has begun every spring with a stock of properties that sellers would faithfully re-list after they hadn’t sold the previous season.But almost overnight business at the Picton-based Chestnut Park brokerage has changed.“I have nothing on my plate any more. I sold everything,” she said.Prince Edward County is one of the hot destinations for Torontonians looking for a rural escape.But like other Ontario resort areas, it is feeling the effects of the GTA’s hyper-heated real estate market. From the Countyto Collingwood, picturesque landscapes are being dotted by high prices and multiple offers.The lust for luxury, a tradition in Muskoka, is migrating to sleepy, lower-priced areas such as Kawartha Lakes.Sales are up but listings are down, way down.“We have been woefully short of listings through the beginning of the season partly because they’re selling so quickly and partly because it’s the time of the year where a lot of cottagers tend to wait until their property is green and nice and ready to go for the ultimate showing,” said Coldwell Banker’s Mike Taylor of the Lakelands Association of Realtors that covers a vast area including Muskoka

, Haliburton and Orillia.Sellers who are waiting are risking more competition as more properties go up for sale, he said.There is a 10 per cent drop in Prince Edward County this year, said Slik.“If we don’t get more properties on the market it’s going to be brutal,” she said.One of her clients recently bid $15,000 over the $615,000 list price on a property. Her competitor’s buyer went $30,000 over. Another buyer simply refused to go near the $689,000 asking price on another more rustic home.The proliferation of wineries — there are now 47 — country charm and proximity to Sandbanks Provincial Park are driving County prices north.“When you look at what’s for sale right now, they’re pretty much palaces,” she said.Of 91 active listings earlier this month, 40 were priced between $700,000 and over $1 million.“Anything under $500,000 we’re in multiple offers,” said Slik.Hot properties with good winery and Sandbanks Provincial Park access are being snapped up by investors from the GTA and Quebec.

Many rent them weekly in an area where summer tourist accommodation is limited.“They’re getting a pile of money for eight weeks or 12 and it’s carrying the cost of their property for them,” she said.In the Lakelands’ area people are buying and enjoying their cottages. But they’re also buying to rent them out, said Taylor.“At the end of the day they’ve got a very strong appreciating asset which you don’t get any other place right now.”Kawartha LakesThey say the oldest cottages are on the nicest properties. Gail McCormack has been living in Kawartha Lakes long enough to know them all. But when she takes the boat out in the spring, she barely recognizes long familiar lakefront homes from the previous fall.“It’s incredible what you see. Not that it’s cheek-to-jowl or anything awful — but very lovely places going up that would be absolutely near or over $1 million if they were to go on the market,” said the founder of Kawartha Waterfront Realty.There’s a broad base of buyers in the $300,000 and $400,000 price range and you can still find those in Kawartha Lakes, which has long been considered an affordable alternative to Muskoka.Those aren’t the prime waterfront lots

I have a listing on Head Lake. It’s an older cottage but it has five bedrooms. It comes fully furnished. It’s going to need some updating. That’s listed for $445,000. One down the road, which is newer, and the great vaulted ceiling that goes up two storeys, now recently sold for $520,000,” she said.But when people buy those properties they either tear them down or do major renovations.As good as 2015 was, McCormack is anticipating 2016 will be better.“A couple of years ago, the average buyer tended to be mature couples at or near retirement. Their kids were going off to university. They were re-nesting,” she said. “Now, it’s a lot of younger professionals.”They have inherited money or they have bought a second home secure in the knowledge that their city residence is worth a lot. When they buy their rural property, though, they’re not interested in mowing the grass. They’re looking for a more natural setting.Increasingly people are also buying places to live in year-round.

Three hubs in Lindsay, Bobcaygeon and Fenelon Falls offer social opportunities and other activities; the area is also attracting lots of retirees.With the expanded road network, including Highway 407 east opening this spring, it’s nothing to zip into the city for a show or meeting, said McCormack.“There’s such a variety of ways to get here, nice little country roads. Talking with a lot of buyers, they put about a two-hour time frame in their travel,” she said.MuskokaIf you don’t have $1 million, Muskoka realtor Anita Latner isn’t going to waste your time or hers talking on the phone about buying on the big lakes of Joseph, Rosseau and Muskoka.Spending less isn’t an option when it comes to owning a piece of waterfront in Canada’s quintessential cottage country. You might find something a little under $1 million but by the time you personalize it, you’re going to hit seven figures, said Latner, whose namesake brokerage bills itself as “Muskoka’s boutique cottage broker.”“

Why look for certain things if you can’t afford them? There’s nothing wrong with having a cottage in another area,” said Latner, who notes there are more affordable properties in Haliburton, Peterborough and Perry Sound.“Their price points are going to be different. But as a purchaser you may have to go there,” she said.The dollar value of waterfront sales was $78 million in April, up 65,8 per cent from the same month last year, according to the Lakelands Association of Realtors that tracks an area including Muskoka, Haliburton and Orillia.But prices are climbing even around Innisfill and Lake Simcoe where retirement home buyers are willing to pay for town water and hydro.Other realtors tell a slightly different story.Even on smaller lakes, $500,000 to $1 million is the hot price point in Muskoka, said Heather Scott of Re/Max Hallmark Realty in Port Carling.She cited a recent listing of a family cottage near Gravenhurst on Little Lake.“We’re trying to get offers within a couple of weeks, which is really quick in our market,” said Scott.Today’s cottagers don’t want to do a lot of renovations but cottages are frequently priced emotionally.“

If it’s been in your family for many years, you don’t necessarily want to part with it. It may not be ideal, modern finishes that new buyer is looking for but it’s the way your dad did it and the way your grandfather did it. It’s just perfect because you have those childhood memories attached to it,” she said.CollingwoodIt doesn’t have the same bidding wars as the city, but buyers are paying list prices or slightly above them to enjoy the proximity and four-season activities of Collingwood, says Royal LePage’s Josh Dolan.He calls it the only four-season recreational area in Ontario. People come for the skiing but find there’s plenty of entertainment and rural pursuits through the rest of the year to make Collingwood an attractive investment, he said.There are a dozen ways to get to Collingwood and recreational activities ranging from the beach to biking, hiking and golf.“The area has actually become as busy, or busier, in the summer than it is in the winter,” said Dolan of Royal LePage.“

We’ve moved from a buyers’ market to a balanced market — even a slight sellers market,” he said.“Stuff that would be on the market for six, nine, 12 months, is now selling in multiple bids at full price or just slightly above ask. We don’t see the big moves that you do in the city,” said Dolan.Collingwood suffers the same housing inventory shortage that is common across Canada, said agent Max Hahne of Engel & Volkers.The big difference between Collingwood and other resort areas is that clients are searching for a forever home. Often they have sold the Muskoka cottage, they’re keeping a condo in the city and maybe going south for winter, he said.“There’s a culture that’s come to Collingwood that we’ve been building for the last 30 years,” said Hahne, who compares the town to Bloor West Village or Yorkville with its own craft brewers and even wineries nearby.In town “there’s a sweet spot” for homes priced between $600,000 and $800,000.“(Clients are) used to living in luxury in Toronto and Muskoka.