Yes, it is very convenient, but since many people buy such houses only to spend there weekends in the summer, very few people bother with such installations because of it's price - from around 1000 USD.
I was looking at a property myself in rural Ukraine as the prices in Bulgaria have gone crazy...it was on UA-cam a young guy selling it on behalf of his parents and it too was lovely about the same land two houses and big barn and smaller out buildings didn't see in what could of easily been a air BnB and lots of fruit trees and fruit bushes just beautiful can't remember where it was more expensive but still tiny price,I think if I remember it was it was in the center of Ukraine..but know I just hope everyone is safe like the elderly gentleman and Babushka in the video... Ukraine is a country I've liked the look of for a long time the countryside is just amazing and beautiful...just hope everyone is safe and well in the area which was filmed....
Hi Eugene! How's your winter ❄️. I will book a call next month. Some villages next to the bigger cities have been turning into Suburbs in Ukraine. Especially in Kyiv.
It's an advantage to those who are Red Pilled. The more difficult the access the safer it shall be when bad times come soon. It's baked into the recipe. Challenges & Difficult times always bring great opportunity!!! Lions hunt! I am relocating to Ukraine this Summer. Love your videos! Much thanks 👍
No one commenting about the advantage/disadvantage of bad roads yet? The advantage is obvious - road is good, it is quick to get to town or wherever, etc The disadvantage of having a good road (in a scenario where not ALL roads are good) is that your village could become a short cut for people going somewhere else. I'm guessing villages in this part of Ukraine are similar to villages in Poland and western Ukraine, mainly just built along the main road. Which means that you do not want lots of traffic going through your village at high speed. Another possible disadvantage of having a very good road would be that your village might become too well known, especially among criminals. I'm thinking the ideal village would have a bad road, but be ~10 km away from the village with the good road :-)...
Seems tempting to buy a property at the cost of an average all inclusive one week holyday...however I wont suggest anyone to buy a rural area property unless they stayed there in the village renting let's say for few months. Is cheap to buy yes but the cost of renovating to a modern standard would cost as much as a new build smaller house. Renting first is an important safety measure in the rural areas in Eastern Europe and not only as the people there are archaic...ranging from naiv, kind and very polite to alcoholics and very hostile attitude just for the fact that you are not one of them...so it really depends on your luck and awareness.
Thank you for the video. Interesting. I noticed often in villages the roofs are made from asbestos sheet. The dust and fibres can be very dangerous if disturbed. I can't see any Western they're wanting to live in such house although I'm sure is quite normal and reasonable for Ukraine. I imagine there is little to no insulation. The windows are very basic of the era. Just too much work and cost to bring to a modern standard. The village seems nice although I have no idea if there is any shopping or facilities? $2,000 for the land I think is cheap. As a professional builder and land developer I would demolish all the building and start again. I wonder how much possibility there would be with the government to subdivide the blocks to 800 square metres and redevelop the road leading to the nearest town? I am pulling my hair out how many politicians I would have to pay off....
Are you sure it is asbestos sheets? Doesn't sound practical as roofs (as insulation, yes). Could it maybe be black-grey bitumen "felt"? That can look really gnarly and greyish when it gets old.
@@Asptuber Yes, these are asbestos sheets on the roof. They are pretty cheap and do not get very hot during summer. Disadvantage is mostly for those who install them, but once they are installed - not so much worries. Most such roofs do not need any maintenance for 50+ years and are still installed in many houses these days in Ukraine, Russia, Moldova, Belarus as well as other ex-USSR countries.
@@UkraineScamExpert Really? How interesting. I've always thought of asbestos as far too porous (knowing it mostly from insulation and fire protection and such).
@@Asptuber well it looks very suspiciously like the old asbestos sheets in Australia. You see these quite commonly in Asian countries as well. The only country I know of that uses bodgie bitumen tar roofing systems is the United States. These types of roofing systems of course it's not safe to collect the roof water. Hence the archaic open wells
@@UkraineScamExpert but there's a problem about email, it may go into the trash folder and receiver will never get it. Just as I wrote an email last week 😂.
Thank You for this video👍 Im in ukrain now, and my friends in ukrain tells me, that Im not allowed to own the land? I can buy a house, but as a Norwegian, I must rent the land? Can i buy or not???
What a bargain. It’s sad the young don’t realize the asset that is there. I’d like to keep the old people on site! They can stay and.show how to operate properly. In a commune style living.
It’s sad that people don’t group together a bit more or may be they do. You don’t need as much money in the village because they are more self sufficient. Young could seasonally work in the city and come back in the summer may be supplement and improve things with an influx of money but take advantage of the lower cost of living as well. I’m sure it does happen of course. It seems sad there isn’t more to hold the young a bit closer the the richness in simple hard life. But we chase the luxuries instead.
@@Eliukcory Usually when someone escapes from village to city and manages to find good job in the city - they would not go back to village any more. Sad, but many villages in Ukraine and in Russia will disappear in the next years.
As I said in video several times, houses with such a bargain price are usually sold within days, but thanks for interest. If many people are interested, I will try to think a way how you can buy similar house in Ukraine at a bargain price.
Don't worry mate...in the rural areas of Eastern Europe (except vicinity of big cities) some 7 out of 10 houses are deserted...the owners (if they have owners) may be willing to sell, although they will never advertise or put the houses on the market. You will need some time and money to solve the paperwork issue as those properties often have no property documents. All in all you need to go "muddy field", you need to learn the language etc.
can a non Ukrainian citizen purchase such houses in Ukraine? And when I heard the price,I replayed it and uttered,WTF in my mind* One more : Does Poltava belong to Eastern Ukraine?How close is to russian occupied ukraine?
Yes, it is possible to buy a land where house is built or land which will be used to build a house. Only land for agricultural purposes cannot be pwned by foreigners in Ukraine.
500 words? Please. You underestimate the amount of words needed to communicate and hold conversations. A1 level is like 500-1000 words. To hold a conversation you need 3000-5000 and to speak without sounding like a idiot or baby, 8000+. Even educated people know 20000+ words. I have C1 Russian. 500 words of Russian and 500 Ukranian will get you no further than some basic child like sentences
Well, as far as I know Shakespeare used 12,000 words, and Pushkin used 10,000 words. I really don't think we use more than 5,000 words in our everyday vocabulary. But if you learn 1,000 words - that would be OK, the more - the better of course.
@@UkraineScamExpert possibly to get by... But at the expense that a 40 year old man sounds like he is disabled, uneducated and simply out of place. Nobody graciously says... Well you are a foreigner so it's OK for a grown man to sound like he's 3 years old. As a man in my 40s... I would feel honestly ashamed that I sound, and behave like a dumb boat person who speaks half the time in gibberish. A man should respect himself and project education, sophistication and integrated. However I seem to be the odd one out of hundreds of foreigners usually English speaking from Australia, nz or America who think its okay to live like a disabled child in his 40s and having to be limited, restricted and frankly idiotised. I know myself... Living 7 years in Ukraine... Without fluent Russian, I would have been scammed, f***ed over and frankly out casted as the immigrant who is low quality or value. I certainly couldn't have obtained the necessary contacts to get my paid driver's license without fluent Russian or ukranian. Maybe its hard for you to know... I went from 0 to fluent speaker in Russian and I know from experience 1000 words is basically idiot level and most people will just switch to English or even avoid you if you cannot hold a conversation without needing to pause, use Google, or sound like a baby. Nevertheless, you have good videos. I wish I knew this stuff years ago, before being scammed or finding good bargains... Or even knowing what is considered normal or not. I cannot imagine a grown man trying to change his car battery and or getting his car repaired with 1000 words. And for me... Its a feel dumb and stupid to talk about basic stuff all the time and never getting to really know people as the depth of conversation is really basic level.
Great topic and video !
yes please make more property videos of all kinds very interesting thx
You are doing good,
Keep it up 👍
I love that cat 😸 behind you.
Thank you brother, very helpful..
Thank you for showing this property, Eugene. There are such good deals available in Ukraine. Great idea to install an indoor bathroom.
Yes, it is very convenient, but since many people buy such houses only to spend there weekends in the summer, very few people bother with such installations because of it's price - from around 1000 USD.
Good job from Canada
yea, actually very interesting, and would like to see some more of such houses a little closer to big cities. am interested. thank you so much.
I was looking at a property myself in rural Ukraine as the prices in Bulgaria have gone crazy...it was on UA-cam a young guy selling it on behalf of his parents and it too was lovely about the same land two houses and big barn and smaller out buildings didn't see in what could of easily been a air BnB and lots of fruit trees and fruit bushes just beautiful can't remember where it was more expensive but still tiny price,I think if I remember it was it was in the center of Ukraine..but know I just hope everyone is safe like the elderly gentleman and Babushka in the video... Ukraine is a country I've liked the look of for a long time the countryside is just amazing and beautiful...just hope everyone is safe and well in the area which was filmed....
This area hasn't been affected by war.
If we are talking about this particular place in the video - everything is OK there. No worries!
Hi Eugene! How's your winter ❄️. I will book a call next month. Some villages next to the bigger cities have been turning into Suburbs in Ukraine. Especially in Kyiv.
I wounder what happen to those olds nice right people and their house right now , I'm praying for you all and Ukraine
With this particular village and area everything is OK.
That place hasn't been affected by war. No worries!
It's an advantage to those who are Red Pilled. The more difficult the access the safer it shall be when bad times come soon. It's baked into the recipe. Challenges & Difficult times always bring great opportunity!!! Lions hunt! I am relocating to Ukraine this Summer. Love your videos! Much thanks 👍
So you are planning to move to a village or a city?
How are you buddy? Hope you and your family are safe at this time. I’m back in May to help you guys!
Thanks for worrying about us!
We are safe to the point that it can be in Ukraine at the moment 🙄
No one commenting about the advantage/disadvantage of bad roads yet?
The advantage is obvious - road is good, it is quick to get to town or wherever, etc
The disadvantage of having a good road (in a scenario where not ALL roads are good) is that your village could become a short cut for people going somewhere else. I'm guessing villages in this part of Ukraine are similar to villages in Poland and western Ukraine, mainly just built along the main road. Which means that you do not want lots of traffic going through your village at high speed.
Another possible disadvantage of having a very good road would be that your village might become too well known, especially among criminals.
I'm thinking the ideal village would have a bad road, but be ~10 km away from the village with the good road :-)...
Seems tempting to buy a property at the cost of an average all inclusive one week holyday...however I wont suggest anyone to buy a rural area property unless they stayed there in the village renting let's say for few months. Is cheap to buy yes but the cost of renovating to a modern standard would cost as much as a new build smaller house. Renting first is an important safety measure in the rural areas in Eastern Europe and not only as the people there are archaic...ranging from naiv, kind and very polite to alcoholics and very hostile attitude just for the fact that you are not one of them...so it really depends on your luck and awareness.
What a price! Wow! Are you sure?
Absolutely 😉
Thank you for the video. Interesting. I noticed often in villages the roofs are made from asbestos sheet. The dust and fibres can be very dangerous if disturbed. I can't see any Western they're wanting to live in such house although I'm sure is quite normal and reasonable for Ukraine. I imagine there is little to no insulation. The windows are very basic of the era. Just too much work and cost to bring to a modern standard.
The village seems nice although I have no idea if there is any shopping or facilities?
$2,000 for the land I think is cheap. As a professional builder and land developer I would demolish all the building and start again.
I wonder how much possibility there would be with the government to subdivide the blocks to 800 square metres and redevelop the road leading to the nearest town? I am pulling my hair out how many politicians I would have to pay off....
Idea is good, but forget it!
Theoretically possible, but practically - almost impossible... or VERY VERY EXPENSIVE that will NEVER pay off!
Are you sure it is asbestos sheets? Doesn't sound practical as roofs (as insulation, yes). Could it maybe be black-grey bitumen "felt"? That can look really gnarly and greyish when it gets old.
@@Asptuber Yes, these are asbestos sheets on the roof. They are pretty cheap and do not get very hot during summer.
Disadvantage is mostly for those who install them, but once they are installed - not so much worries.
Most such roofs do not need any maintenance for 50+ years and are still installed in many houses these days in Ukraine, Russia, Moldova, Belarus as well as other ex-USSR countries.
@@UkraineScamExpert Really? How interesting. I've always thought of asbestos as far too porous (knowing it mostly from insulation and fire protection and such).
@@Asptuber well it looks very suspiciously like the old asbestos sheets in Australia. You see these quite commonly in Asian countries as well. The only country I know of that uses bodgie bitumen tar roofing systems is the United States.
These types of roofing systems of course it's not safe to collect the roof water. Hence the archaic open wells
ill buy it in heartbeat!
Price was REALLY a bargain!
@@UkraineScamExpert sir how can I contact you?
@@allenwong9249 My email address is in the description to each video as well as I show it at the end of each video ;)
@@UkraineScamExpert but there's a problem about email, it may go into the trash folder and receiver will never get it. Just as I wrote an email last week 😂.
Thank You for this video👍
Im in ukrain now,
and my friends in ukrain tells me,
that Im not allowed to own the land?
I can buy a house, but as a Norwegian,
I must rent the land?
Can i buy or not???
I'm a foreigner in Ukraine. I own land. So not true. It's not Thailand
What a bargain. It’s sad the young don’t realize the asset that is there. I’d like to keep the old people on site! They can stay and.show how to operate properly. In a commune style living.
There is almost no work in the village for young people. I will have to record a video explaining about it if people will be interested...
It’s sad that people don’t group together a bit more or may be they do. You don’t need as much money in the village because they are more self sufficient. Young could seasonally work in the city and come back in the summer may be supplement and improve things with an influx of money but take advantage of the lower cost of living as well. I’m sure it does happen of course. It seems sad there isn’t more to hold the young a bit closer the the richness in simple hard life. But we chase the luxuries instead.
@@Eliukcory Usually when someone escapes from village to city and manages to find good job in the city - they would not go back to village any more.
Sad, but many villages in Ukraine and in Russia will disappear in the next years.
what's the monthly HOA fees?
Hv u forgotten about minimum wage episode?
No, will record it soon...
Hello has the house been sold? I am really interested!
Yes!
Such bargain priced houses are sold within days, maybe 1 week.
OH thats sad!!
i hope the war is over next year.i am looking to relocate to ukraine. and would like to get your input when i am there
We all hope it is over as soon as possible
I am interested to buy this house. I am from Canada
As I said in video several times, houses with such a bargain price are usually sold within days, but thanks for interest.
If many people are interested, I will try to think a way how you can buy similar house in Ukraine at a bargain price.
Don't worry mate...in the rural areas of Eastern Europe (except vicinity of big cities) some 7 out of 10 houses are deserted...the owners (if they have owners) may be willing to sell, although they will never advertise or put the houses on the market. You will need some time and money to solve the paperwork issue as those properties often have no property documents. All in all you need to go "muddy field", you need to learn the language etc.
@@ISPRI2011 If docs are not in order, in Ukraine paperwork in such village will be about 1K.
@@UkraineScamExpert + the time + possible legal complications with inheritances, property limits etc.
can a non Ukrainian citizen purchase such houses in Ukraine?
And when I heard the price,I replayed it and uttered,WTF in my mind*
One more : Does Poltava belong to Eastern Ukraine?How close is to russian occupied ukraine?
Sure, anyone can buy such house.
Poltava is about 500 km away from occupied territories of Donbass.
@@UkraineScamExpert what makes Sumy special for an Ukrainian city?
hello can a pakistani national buy the land and house in ukrain so please guide me Thanks
Yes, it is possible to buy a land where house is built or land which will be used to build a house.
Only land for agricultural purposes cannot be pwned by foreigners in Ukraine.
Poltava! Far off Odessa, Eugine!
500 words? Please. You underestimate the amount of words needed to communicate and hold conversations. A1 level is like 500-1000 words. To hold a conversation you need 3000-5000 and to speak without sounding like a idiot or baby, 8000+. Even educated people know 20000+ words. I have C1 Russian. 500 words of Russian and 500 Ukranian will get you no further than some basic child like sentences
Well, as far as I know Shakespeare used 12,000 words, and Pushkin used 10,000 words.
I really don't think we use more than 5,000 words in our everyday vocabulary. But if you learn 1,000 words - that would be OK, the more - the better of course.
@@UkraineScamExpert possibly to get by... But at the expense that a 40 year old man sounds like he is disabled, uneducated and simply out of place. Nobody graciously says... Well you are a foreigner so it's OK for a grown man to sound like he's 3 years old. As a man in my 40s... I would feel honestly ashamed that I sound, and behave like a dumb boat person who speaks half the time in gibberish. A man should respect himself and project education, sophistication and integrated. However I seem to be the odd one out of hundreds of foreigners usually English speaking from Australia, nz or America who think its okay to live like a disabled child in his 40s and having to be limited, restricted and frankly idiotised. I know myself... Living 7 years in Ukraine... Without fluent Russian, I would have been scammed, f***ed over and frankly out casted as the immigrant who is low quality or value. I certainly couldn't have obtained the necessary contacts to get my paid driver's license without fluent Russian or ukranian. Maybe its hard for you to know... I went from 0 to fluent speaker in Russian and I know from experience 1000 words is basically idiot level and most people will just switch to English or even avoid you if you cannot hold a conversation without needing to pause, use Google, or sound like a baby. Nevertheless, you have good videos. I wish I knew this stuff years ago, before being scammed or finding good bargains... Or even knowing what is considered normal or not. I cannot imagine a grown man trying to change his car battery and or getting his car repaired with 1000 words. And for me... Its a feel dumb and stupid to talk about basic stuff all the time and never getting to really know people as the depth of conversation is really basic level.
If you other opportunities like this ,please contact with me