Up-Sticks and Move Interstate!


Note from the Editor:
This article was kindly written for the SDC by member @Doctor Alan.

Australia is a wonderful country—not just ‘lucky’ but blessed with amazing scenery (if a little sunburnt!) and LOTS of space! Unlike the normally quite insular people in England, where I was born, many of us really don’t want to stay in the same place all our lives, living a sort of ‘Coronation Street’ existence. There are new places to experience and lots of friendly people to meet.

We left England when I was in my 20s and made a huge move to Australia for £10, and never looked back. (I’d been here before as an 11-year-old, and my family moved back to England after about 3 years – enough for me to have some wonderful memories of the place).

I lived with my wife and son in NSW for about 20 years, during which time we’d increased our family to include a lovely daughter.

I regard ‘20’ as being our ‘itchy feet’ number, because it seems that our destiny is to move after that time.



Our first move was to WA. We’d fallen in love with Perth when I was over there on a business trip with my wife, and we liked it so much, we couldn’t wait to put our house on the market when we got back to Sydney.

I think it was one of those ‘meant-to-be’ decisions – we wouldn’t have wanted to move if my wife hadn’t flown to Perth with me and shared my liking for the place. The newly created Compass Airlines was offering discounted airfares that included accommodation in Perth, and I was able to save the company a fair bit of money.


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Packing can be a bigger task than you’d expect. Image Credit: Shutterstock



Planning:

Unless you’re a Bezos or a Musk, you can’t simply ‘up-sticks’ and move – a certain amount of planning has to take place.

Questions like: ‘Can I afford to resign from my job if they can’t place me interstate?’, ‘When should I put my house on the market?’, ‘Do I need to “downsize”?’, ‘Should I take all my furniture?’, and so on. It’s a BIG decision!

Your job: If you’re like I was, you may really want to consider a completely new start, especially if the company for which you work is not able to offer you employment where you’re going. What you must remember, though, is not to advertise the fact of your impending departure until you’re just about leaving the state! You’ll probably want to check out the employment section for your new location at this stage, and if you’re lucky, you may find that you can walk straight into a brilliant new career!

Selling your house: You should probably put your house on the market as soon as possible. It can take quite a while to sell a house, unless you accept some stupidly low offer.

Of course, you’ll need to research the area where you propose to live and make sure you can afford to move there! Sydney's house prices are some of the highest in Australia, so you may find it a financially sensible decision to move to another state.



Down-sizing: We should all do this as a regular procedure every few years. If you haven’t touched something for five years, and it’s just gathering dust in the loft, perhaps you wouldn’t miss it!

I made up ‘garage sale’ signs from old real estate advertising boards I found at the local tip. I folded them into a triangle, painted ‘Garage Sale’ and the address on them, and placed them at roundabouts and local road junctions, with the sign being held down by a brick. It was easier, cheaper and more effective than advertising in the local rag. I put these signs out most weekends until all our ‘junk’ was sold. (Of course, I lived in the country, and it may not be possible to do this where you live.).

You can also sell more valuable items on eBay or similar, but you’ll need to get moving on that, from the day you put your house on the market or before.

Furniture: You may want to start afresh with furniture – we did – and the amount of money you might lose on this is offset by the reduced removal cost. It’s a good idea to try to sell it to the new owners of your house when they become ‘unconditional’. A fridge, for instance, is a very large object to cart across the country.

My wife wrote a list of all our furniture, and next to each piece, she put the asking price. Another column was left for the prospective buyer to indicate how much they were willing to offer.


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Do you use removalists or friends and family? Image Credit: Shutterstock



Interstate Removals: We ‘shopped around’ for the best price for an interstate removalist, which included storage in WA until we’d got settled. Interstate removalists, if you get a good one, will help you pack any ‘last minute’ items into boxes they generally have with them.

Our experience:

Selling a house is a bit of a lottery, really – sometimes it takes an age, and other times, just the right person comes along. We thought we had plenty of time. We needed to ‘downsize’ quite drastically, and we started organising regular garage sales and offloaded quite a bit of ‘stuff’ to family and op-shops. Quite surprisingly, our house sold very quickly (you can be lucky sometimes!) and I resigned from my job (which included losing my company car!). We decided to take most of our furniture this time, but it would have been almost as economical to either offer it to the new buyers at a good price or to sell it on eBay or something similar.



The Other Side:

After a three-week leisurely drive from Sydney, making side-trips to a lot of places we’d only read about, we arrived in Perth and had to set those wheels in motion to join the rat race! No house, no job!

Bank: The first thing to do is get some sort of stability to the bank account, so that all that money from the sale of the house in NSW can have a place to accumulate interest. It’s worth shopping around for this because some banks have pretty good short-term rates. Presumably, you’ll have a Visa or Mastercard to dip into for the first few weeks, which is essential if the proceeds of your home have been delayed in any way.

Car: Your car will need to be re-registered in the new state. You should be able to secure a refund for the unused registration of your car, and you should organise your new licence in the first couple of weeks.

Hotel and accommodation: As soon as you arrive, you’ll book into a hotel or motel for a night or two, while you find rental accommodation, and you start looking for something more permanent. In our case, we asked a lot of questions and got some idea of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ areas to live in, and this had a marked effect on the price of a home. (You should have got some idea of this before leaving Sydney, of course).

In our case, we chose Armadale, and within days of being in Perth, we’d signed up to have a house built. We’d also signed a three-month lease for a small unit in Como and spent a fair bit of time putting the minimum amount of furniture in it while taking a few items out of storage, where our NSW furniture was.

Employment: This is probably one of the most important hurdles to jump. We’d arrived just as Paul Keating was announcing the ‘recession we had to have’, so it was a little hard to find employment. I wrote many, many job applications almost from the moment we’d arrived, before I finally found one. In hindsight, I should have made a move on this before we left Sydney, but I’d underestimated the difficulty. Of course, a regular income means a loan for the house could be secured (I hadn’t paid off my NSW mortgage at that stage), and we could relax a fair bit. Security is a wonderful thing!



Later moves:

Roughly 20 years later, after I’d retired, we started planning for our ‘final phase’. We decided to move to Queensland because the houses were a fair bit cheaper. After several moves in WA to different areas, ending up in a rural area (Gingin), we wanted to get back into ‘civilisation’! This included a decent internet service and close medical facilities, among other things that city folk take for granted.
Of course, as a retiree, a lot of the preceding information is superfluous – we moved into a ‘Retirement Resort’ and were able to pay cash for the house. The house we bought was a ‘show home’, so we didn’t have to wait for it to be built. We’d left most of our furniture in WA with the house and sold the rest, and still had enough cash to buy all new furniture in Queensland – much simpler!

I can’t say it’s a permanent home – we just may decide to relocate in the future, who knows? We are, however, getting to the point in our lives when it’s just nice to ‘put our feet up’ and relax!

From the Editor:
I've lived in Queensland, Canberra and now, New South Wales, but never outside Australia. How about you? Have you moved houses, states or even countries before? How was the experience? Let us know your best tips and tricks in the comments below.

Love Alan’s writing and want to read more? You might also like to read:
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l take offence at you calling the English ''insuler people'' Keep your opinions to your self not all of us lived the ''Coronation '' lifestyle . l came from Ilkley a lovely little village with parks, a river and moors and so much beauty . l always intending going back but fate choose otherwise and now all my family are here and they come first. You obviously haven't travelled around England much or went round with your eyes shut.My daughter has just come from there and couldn't fit everything in that she wanted to see.l'm not saying Australia hasn't got beauty too but just different. Shame on you for pulling your own country down.
 
Well I've been a gypsy for the last 32 years. My husband family lived in Kalgoorlie so for the first five years we ran a renovation business while renovating our own home.
After that we moved to Murray Bridge in SA where we bought a beautiful old stone Federation house. My husband's daughter's lived in SA. We spent the next
four years renovating this home back to its former glory and then back to WA where my sons lived.
This time to Collie where I fell in love with a cute little cottage with beautiful metal ceilings and art deco style windows.
Five years later we had renovated this home, built my daughter her own granny flat and flipped numerous other homes.
After winter with 32 mornings under zero and one minus 6 degrees my husband wanted out to a warmer climate.

So here we were in Geraldton, two storey home this time. Again renovations, but although the weather was beautiful 15 months later we were on the move again.
There were and still are a lot of "social" problems in Geraldton and after being broken into I'd had enough.
Now we werem in Katanning. Another doer-upperer Federation home. Three years later on the move again as my husband wanted to be closer to his mother who was ill.
Moved to lovely Donnybrook where we purchased a two storey, three level Mediterranean style home and started renovating . This was by far my favourite home and I'd still be there if my husband hadn't wanted to go back to SA.🤷‍♀️

Back to Murray Bridge, another renovating, but 18 months later after falling out with two of his daughters my husband wanted to leave so back to Mandurah.

Would you believe only 15 months later we were back in Victor Harbor SA living near the one daughter my husband had contact with. That didn't last too long. Daughter decided they were moving to Cairns. Husband chucked a sad and we were back to Mandurah.

There for about 4 years. renos and granny flat, but this time I wanted to leave with their drug problems, home
invasions, etc and move to a nice quiet country town.
So we found ourselves in Quairading where I was more than happy
and intended to stay.
But as fate would have it my husband passed away circumstances made me decide to move to a much smaller home we had in Wagin in the Great Southern.
Will I move again, who knows knows.
Probably one day when I can't look after my daughter anymore I will need to move again to NSW and join my son.

One thing I can say. The last 32 years haven't been boring and I still love renovating. New bathroom and walk in robe coming up. Just have to pay someone to build the extension this time. But I'm still capable of doing the tiling etc.
 
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