Ryan Boyer Realtor Keller Williams San Diego

SAN DIEGO - Oct. 26, 2019 - What to Expect During a Home Inspection

By: HouseLogic

From finding an inspector to dealing with surprises — this is your guide to getting a house checked out.

The first thing you need to know about home inspection: You'll feel all the feels.

There's the excitement — the inspection could be the longest time you're in the house, after the showing.

Right behind that comes … anxiety. What if the inspector finds something wrong? So wrong you can't buy the house?

Then there's impatience. Seriously, is this whole home-buying process over yet?

Not yet. But you're close. So take a deep breath. Because the most important thing to know about home inspection: It's just too good for you, as a buyer, to skip. Here's why.

A Home Inspector Is Your Protector

An inspector helps you make sure a house isn't hiding anything before you commit for the long haul. (Think about it this way: You wouldn't even get coffee with a stranger without checking out their history.)

A home inspector identifies any reasonably discoverable problems with the house (a leaky roof, faulty plumbing, etc.). Hiring an inspector is you doing your due diligence. To find a good one (more on how to do that soon), it helps to have an understanding of what the typical home inspection entails.

An inspection is all about lists.

Before an inspection, the home inspector will review the seller's property disclosure statement. (Each state has its own requirements for what sellers must disclose on these forms; some have stronger requirements than others.) The statement lists any flaws the seller is aware of that could negatively affect the home's value.

The disclosure comes in the form of an outline, covering such things as:

• Mold
• Pest infestation
• Roof leaks
• Foundation damage
• Other problems, depending on what your state mandates.

During the inspection, an inspector has three tasks -- to:

• Identify problems with the house that he or she can see
• Suggest fixes
• Prepare a written report, usually with photos, noting observed defects

This report is critical to you and your agent — it's what you'll use to request repairs from the seller. (We'll get into how you'll do that in a minute, too.)

The Inspector Won't Check Everything


Ryan Boyer Keller Williams San Diego

http://www.kwsold.me

Contact
Ryan Boyer Realtor Keller Williams
ryanboyer@kw.com
6199009400

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