City

Real estate in Commentry: prices, risks and buying insights

Located in Allier, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes.

Commentry is a French town in the Allier department, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, with around 6,017 residents. Whether you're after a main home, a holiday flat or a rental investment, buying in Commentry means looking well beyond the asking price. A property can feel fairly priced and still hide a weak energy rating, upcoming works, a fading neighbourhood or a local risk the seller didn't flag. BienCheck helps you cross-check market prices, official risks, energy performance and buyer-side advice before you put an offer in, with a fully independent view. This page brings together the essentials you need to know about Commentry: property prices, risks, energy, local market and the smart checks to run before you sign.

Is buying in Commentry a good idea?

The answer depends on the property, not just the town. Commentry has its strengths and its watch-points, and every address deserves its own read. BienCheck is progressively enriching this page with local indicators (market tension, negotiation room, energy, risks) from official sources. In the meantime, run a tailored analysis to compare the asking price with the local market and known risks.

Property prices in Commentry

Local DVF data will be added progressively. In the meantime, BienCheck recommends comparing the asking price with recent local transactions, the property condition, energy rating, floor area and local risks.

Property risks in Commentry

Official risk data will be progressively added from public sources. Before buying, it is still recommended to review the risk report, the energy rating and the documents provided by the seller.

According to Géorisques data for Commentry

Detailed Géorisques data for Commentry is currently being integrated. The national base is enriched town by town from the official indicators of the French Ministry for Ecological Transition (GASPAR, RGA, radon, ICPE). Risk levels will appear here as soon as this town is processed. Nothing is fabricated in the meantime.

According to ADEME energy data for Commentry

Detailed energy rating data for Commentry is currently being integrated. The base is enriched town by town from the official diagnostics published by ADEME. The dominant class, the A-to-G breakdown and the diagnostics count will appear here as soon as this town is processed. Nothing is fabricated in the meantime.

BienCheck territorial analysis for Commentry

The BienCheck score for Commentry will appear once the DVF, ADEME and Géorisques data for the town are all integrated. Nothing is fabricated in the meantime.

Energy rating and energy performance in Commentry

Local energy rating data will be added progressively. The energy rating remains an important factor before buying because it can affect running costs, future renovation works, resale potential and negotiation.

Buying tips for Commentry

Before buying in Commentry, it is important not to rely only on the asking price. A property can look attractive while hiding future costs, a weak energy rating, upcoming works or a significant negotiation margin. BienCheck helps buyers combine available data to get a clearer view before making an offer.

  • Local price per sqm
  • Gap with the asking price
  • Energy rating and running cost
  • Natural and industrial risks
  • HOA fees and works fund
  • Renovation works to plan
  • Resale potential
  • Realistic negotiation room

How BienCheck analyzes a property in Commentry

For a property in Commentry, BienCheck looks at the asking price, floor area, location, energy rating, local risks, fees, planned works, condominium setup, resale potential and possible negotiation room.

The Premium report can combine available public data with the information provided by the user.

Frequently asked questions

Is it a good time to buy in Commentry?+

No town is good or bad in absolute terms, and Commentry is no exception. What matters is the property, the area and the price. Look at three things: recent sales activity (DVF data), the average time before a sale agreement is signed, and the gap between asking prices and real sale prices. A cooling market gives you negotiating room. A tight market means moving fast, often at the top of the range. BienCheck pulls these signals together for Commentry so you don't judge the market on visible listings alone, which over-represent properties that aren't selling.

What's the price per sqm in Commentry today?+

The median price per sqm in Commentry is computed from real recorded sales (DVF, French tax office), not from listing prices. That's the right benchmark to check whether an asking price stacks up. On a specific property, always cross-check against comparable sales over the past 12 months at equivalent surface, floor and EPC. A 10 to 15% premium over market needs to be justified (view, terrace, recent renovation) or knocked down. The Property prices page breaks down houses vs apartments and the multi-year trend.

Which risks should I check before signing in Commentry?+

Five official risks to review in Commentry: flooding, clay shrinkage (RGA), seismic, radon, listed industrial sites. The risks statement (ERP) must be annexed to the sale agreement by the seller. BienCheck cross-checks the exact address against Géorisques data to confirm what is actually present around the property. No single risk rules out a purchase, but each one must be priced in, and some (high-zone clay shrinkage on an older house) deserve an extra survey before you make an offer.

Does the EPC really matter in Commentry?+

Yes, more every year. In Commentry like anywhere in France, an F or G energy rating means a discount at purchase and a real resale risk, because buyers price in the insulation works and upcoming rental restrictions. A, B or C ratings defend price better and sell faster. If a property you want is poorly rated, get a renovation quote before offering and use it as a hard negotiation lever. National subsidies exist (MaPrimeRénov', CEE certificates, zero-rate eco-loan) but they never cover everything.

How do I negotiate the price of a property in Commentry?+

A serious negotiation in Commentry isn't done on gut feel. Build your case on four points: recent comparable DVF sales, gap to the local per-sqm price, EPC and works to plan, identified risks. Time on market and seller motivation also count. BienCheck calculates an estimated margin and hands you the arguments to put on the table, as an evidenced starting point, never as a blunt demand. An offer backed by quotes and comparable sales has a far better chance of being accepted than a random discount.

What costs come on top of the price in Commentry?+

On older stock in Commentry, plan for around 7 to 8% in notary fees (transfer duties + fees + disbursements), paid at the notary on signing day. Add the annual property tax (ask the seller for the previous year's exact figure — it varies hugely), the second-home tax if applicable, HOA fees for an apartment, and a broker fee if you use one. On new-build, notary fees drop to roughly 2 to 3%, but the per-sqm price is usually 20 to 30% higher than older stock.

What should I check before signing the sale agreement in Commentry?+

Before signing the preliminary sale agreement in Commentry, check the title deed, the full diagnostic file (EPC, asbestos, lead, electrical, gas, risks statement, termites if listed zone), the absence of awkward easements, the local urban plan and nearby planning projects, the HOA by-laws and the last three general meeting minutes for an apartment, the state of the works fund and any voted capital calls. An incomplete file or minutes mentioning heavy unfunded works are serious red flags. Never sign under pressure.

House or apartment in Commentry: how to choose?+

It depends on lifestyle, budget and horizon. A house in Commentry gives you a plot, more surface and no HOA, but you handle the roof, heating and garden yourself, and local tax is often heavier. An apartment usually offers a more central location, less personal upkeep, but HOA fees and decisions shared in general meetings. Per-sqm price differs too: on Commentry, compare house and apartment medians before deciding. Our methodology page details how these criteria weigh in the BienCheck score.

Is rental investment profitable in Commentry?+

Gross rental yield in Commentry is simple: annual rent ex-charges ÷ purchase price (fees included) × 100. But gross isn't enough. Factor in realistic vacancy, non-recoverable charges, property tax, owner's insurance, possible management fees and tax. The EPC also drives long-term rental eligibility. A good yield in Commentry is built on a well-negotiated purchase price and a property that resells easily, not just on a high rent. The Rental investment page covers the practical levers.

What should I check on the local urban plan in Commentry?+

The local urban plan (PLU) for Commentry tells you what can be built around the property: permitted height, footprint, building rights, planned roads, alignments. An empty neighbouring plot can become a building that takes away your view or sunlight. If you buy with an extension in mind, ask the town hall for a planning certificate (CUa or CUb) to lock in feasibility before signing. It takes a few weeks but saves you from paying for a project that will never happen.

How do I plan the resale of a property in Commentry?+

Resale is won at purchase. Three drivers matter in Commentry: a location that stays sought after (school, transport, shops), an EPC that won't become a deterrent, and the absence of an unquantified major risk. "Standard" properties (well-located 2 or 3-room flats, 90-130 sqm family houses with a reasonable plot) are the most liquid. Atypical properties do sell, just more slowly. A purchase price properly negotiated, backed by DVF comparables, remains the best guarantee of a smooth resale in five or ten years, whatever the market cycle.

How does BienCheck help me buy in Commentry?+

BienCheck compiles the public data that matters for Commentry: DVF prices, Géorisques risks, ADEME energy ratings, neighbourhood context. On a specific property, start a free analysis: we benchmark the asking price against the market, surface the risks tied to the address, price in the EPC impact and calculate an estimated negotiation margin. The Premium report adds detailed comparables, arguments to use with the seller and a long-term asset read. The BienCheck score works as an independent second opinion, buyer-focused, never agent-driven.

Explore Commentry

Property prices in Commentry
Real-estate prices in Commentry: median price per sqm for houses and apartments, 12-month trend, comparable sales from public DVF data. Independent BienCheck analysis.
Real-estate market in Commentry
Commentry real-estate market: tension, negotiation room, average time to sell, BienCheck buyer-side advice on timing.
Buy a house in Commentry
Everything you need to buy a house in Commentry: average prices, best neighborhoods, risks to check, questions to ask before signing.
Buy an apartment in Commentry
Buy an apartment in Commentry: price per sqm, HOA fees, ideal floor, works fund, buyer-side BienCheck tips.
Rental investment in Commentry
Rental investment in Commentry: gross and net yield, average rents, tenant demand, tax schemes, independent BienCheck analysis.
Building land in Commentry
Buy land in Commentry: price per sqm, zoning rules, utility hookups, clay and flood risks, what to check before purchase.
Condominiums in Commentry
Everything on condos in Commentry: typical fees, works fund, voted major works, key items in the building log.
Property risks in Commentry
Every risk to know before buying in Commentry: flood, clay shrinkage, seismic, radon, industrial sites. Official Géorisques data.
Flood risk in Commentry
Flood risk in Commentry: flood zones, prevention plan, risk level, impact on insurance and property value.
Clay shrinkage in Commentry
Clay shrinkage and swelling risk in Commentry: exposure level, mandatory soil study, crack signs to look for.
Seismic risk in Commentry
Seismic risk in Commentry: official zone, anti-seismic rules, what to check on the property and insurance.
Radon in Commentry
Radon level in Commentry: municipal radon potential, recommended measurements, ventilation solutions.
Industrial sites and pollution in Commentry
Industrial sites, ICPE and polluted sites in Commentry: official records, distance to property, impact on purchase.
Average EPC in Commentry
EPC in Commentry: distribution of homes from A to G, average rating, typical energy use. Official ADEME data.
Energy consumption in Commentry
Home energy use in Commentry: kWh/sqm/year, typical annual cost, main consumption items.
Real-estate agencies in Commentry
Directory of real-estate agencies in Commentry: addresses, contacts, buyer reviews.
Notaries in Commentry
Notaries in Commentry: directory, fees, role in property purchase.
Mortgage brokers in Commentry
Mortgage brokers in Commentry: negotiated rates, fees, comparison.
Property hunters in Commentry
Property hunters in Commentry: tailored search, fees, buyer testimonials.
Property dealers in Commentry
Active property dealers in Commentry: profile, asset types, renovation projects.
Property developers in Commentry
Developers and new-build programs in Commentry: off-plan, deliveries, prices, warranties.
Department
Allier
Postal codes

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