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Common Contingencies in the Offer to Purchase- Part 1 The Home Inspection

By
Real Estate Agent with Coldwell Banker Professionals

Common Contingencies in the Offer to Purchase- Part 1 The Home Inspection

A home inspection is a common contingency included in an offer to purchase in Oakland County Michigan. Not all buyers ask for one, but most do. FHA and VA appraisals ARE NOT home inspections and you will be signing "as is" statements at the closing, so a home inspection is not a bad idea. Any inspections you ask for usually need to be performed within a week or ten days of an accepted offer, and most inspections are at the buyer's expense. I usually recommend to my buyer clients that they pay for all their inspections. That way it's your inspector working for YOU- not the seller.

There are several possible inspections a buyer can ask for: a general home inspection, well and septic inspections, radon inspection, mold inspection, pest inspection, lead paint inspection. And the list can go on and on. The most common is the general home inspection. Well and septic inspections are pretty common, too. Your home inspector can recommend any further inspections if he sees the need for one.

A general home inspection usually includes looking at the major components such as:

  • Structural elements, foundation, framing etc
  • Plumbing systems
  • Heating 
  • Roofing
  • Electrical systems
  • Cosmetic condition, paint, siding etc
  • What I call general once over- caulking, condition of the deck, insulation, etc. 

If the house you're buying has a well, your general home inspector can usually collect a water sample and have it tested. He is also the best person to talk to about what type of water tests to have. Some areas are higher risk to have radon or arsenic in the water than other areas. They usually can inspect your septic, too (if the house is on septic as opposed to sewer). If the house has been vacant any length of time, most inspectors will tell you a septic inspection is a waste of money.

There will be small issues on just about every home inspection- no house is perfect. We are generally looking for major issues that would be unacceptable for the price you are paying for that particular home. Another thing to remember is there is no such thing as a licensed home inspector in Michigan. Most are licensed builders, but home inspector is still a field that doesn't require licensing. So it's important to find a reputable home inspector. I work with one who is reasonably priced and very thorough. I don't receive a referral fee or kick back for referring him- I just know my clients will get good service.

If you have any questions about home inspections please feel free to call or email me anytime.

Posted by

Jackie Hawley, Realtor, ePro

ReMax Encore
Cell: (248)736-6406
Jackie@JackieHawley.com 
www.MiRelocation.com 

 

Jason Channell
Diadem Property Inspections - Serving Southeast Michigan - Troy, MI
The House Sleuth

Home inspectors are a lot like family doctors. They can give you the overall picture of a home's health. But for major areas of concern, s/he will refer the buyer to a specialist (HVAC contractor, roofer, etc.).

Sep 17, 2010 04:20 AM
Jackie Hawley
Coldwell Banker Professionals - Oxford, MI
Southeast Michigan Real Estate

So true. And like family doctors (and real estate agents) there are great inspectors and crappy inspectors. :) Lately I've been getting questions from buyers asking about the inspection failing- no pass fail in my mind. You can live with the problems or you can't. I bought a house with a wet basement. I didn't care- I got a GREAT deal (and I paid full price). Some people won't buy a house with a wet basement. I had one buyer keep me at a house almost all day- first the home inspector, 3 hours later the furnace person, then the electrician, then the pest inspector, then the septic inspector, then someone from a lab to collect water. He spent a ton, but there were not surprises! 

Sep 17, 2010 04:32 AM
Jason Channell
Diadem Property Inspections - Serving Southeast Michigan - Troy, MI
The House Sleuth

Yeah, there is no pass/fail in a home inspection (not like code or structural inspections). The idea is to remove the element of surprise.

Fortunately, most of the home inspectors I know are really knowledgeable and effective.

I'm always amazed at what home buyers are interested in during an inspection... or what about the house bothers them. Each buyer is unique and each property is unique. That makes the job a lot of fun.

Sep 17, 2010 04:41 AM
Jackie Hawley
Coldwell Banker Professionals - Oxford, MI
Southeast Michigan Real Estate

You probably only associate with other professionals. I see whatever clown a buyer hires- both my buyers and my listings. I've seen things that a so called inspector misses- and I am by no means an inspector, handy man, etc. I helped my grandpa put a roof on a barn once- I was the grunt. That is about the extent of my building experience.

Sep 17, 2010 04:54 AM