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The Home Inspection Blues

Reblogger Brian and Heather Halliday
Home Inspector with Halliday Home Inspections

This is a well written post.  We want to share it again in hopes to provide a remedy for the "Home Inspection Blues"!

We always try to give an honest and informative report for the buyer to be confident in their purchase and give them a blueprint of all aspects of their new home. 

Sellers can also have their home inspected in order for them to offer buyers a copy of the report and alleviate the negotiation process, also helps the agent!

Original content by Leslie Ebersole

Heard of the home inspection blues? After viewing dozens of homes over many weeks, you've selected the perfect house. The price is negotiated! The contract is signed! Plan the house-warming party! Call the movers!

But what's the REALTOR® droning on about...home inspection? You shush her while you dream of serving pancakes to smiling children on a sunny morning. You can see the Christmas tree in the front window....the gardens you'll plant in the spring.

In the blink of an eye your REALTOR® changes...from the chirpy cheerleader who loved every house to a dour-faced skeptic who is muttering about "material defects" and "health and safety".  She says you will have to actually pay money to some crabby guy to pick the house apart and destroy your dreams. You begin to develop a case of the home inspection blues.

You aren't expecting a perfect house, you assure your REALTOR®. But suddenly, everyone you've ever met has a bad house story. You hear about houses sliding off foundations and furnaces that blew up in the dead of winter. You begin to pray that the crabby guy can see through walls. Now the home inspection blues have settled in for a long visit.

But shake off that gloomy feeling. The home inspection is a time to learn about the house and make sure that it's safe. It's a time to make sure that there aren't problems that exceed the buyer's resources to address in the future.  In Illinois, where I work as a St Charles IL real estate agent, the home inspection is supposed to identify defects in the major mechanical and structural elements of the home such as:

- Any malfunction in the heating and cooling systems. (But old doesn't mean malfunctioning)
- Clear evidence of structural problems such as a cracked foundation or rotted wood in a staircase
- Plumbing issues such as toilets that don't flush or faucets that are not working.
- Electrical system problems such as an overloaded service box

The home inspector is also responsible for noting possible environmental hazards that require further evaluation, including radon. asbestos, soil contamination, mold or gas leaks.

There are many gray areas of what a seller can be asked to address after a  home inspection. If the questionable component of the house was to code when it was built, the seller may not be required to make the change. For example, we now know that bathroom fans should be vented to the outside of the home, not into the attic. A home inspector might recommend this be changed as an improvement to the house.

I always recommend that a buyer have a professional home inspection and would insist on a signed waiver if it was declined. The home inspection is intended to make sure that a buyer knows about problems, issues and defects in a home so that they are not taking on more than they expected.

So hire a great home inspector and learn as much as possible from him (or her) about the house. Then work with your REALTOR® and attorney to make a realistic list of requests from the seller.

Note: I am a licensed REALTOR® in Illinois, so these observations are made based on my experience and our state laws. Please consult with local professionals for the requirements for home inspections in your area.

This post was written by Leslie Ebersole of Baird & Warner Real Estate.
Use or reproduction of the material published on this site is expressly prohibited without the express written permission of the author.

 

My Website FoxValleyRealEstate.net

My Email leslie.ebersole@bairdwarner.com

My Mobile (630)945-7935

Dan Edward Phillips
Dan Edward Phillips, Humboldt and Del Norte Counties, CA - Eureka, CA
Humboldt and Del Norte Counties, CA

Good Morning Brian and Heather, an excellent post that I somehow missed.  Thanks for putting it up again.

Jul 06, 2011 11:12 PM
Katie McBride
RE/MAX Executive Realty - Hopkinton, MA
The McBride Team

We feel a home inspection is essential in the buying process.  Information gained is invaluable.

Jul 06, 2011 11:13 PM
Robert Butler
Aspect Inspection - Montreal West Island, QC
Montreal Home Inspector | Aspect Inspection

That's definately a great one to reblog guys, but I don't have to tell you that. I'm pretty sure many buyers go through that emotional swing.

Spoken as one crabby inspector guy to another.

Jul 07, 2011 04:53 AM
Brian and Heather Halliday
Halliday Home Inspections - Temecula, CA
Temecula Home Inspector

@Dan, glad we could reblog for you to see. Hope your having a great week!

Katie- Agreed! Home buyers should absolutely have as much information on an investment of this magnitude. It will allow everyone to sleep a little better.

To my friend and crabby compadre Robert- Thanks for the comment. Yes, Heather and I both read this and thought it should be reblogged. The more inspections I do, even if there is something wrong, I notice the buyer's demeanor change to a "calm" after getting the information. That "emotional swing" is certainly real. Hope your well and busy!

Jul 07, 2011 07:11 AM