Hiring a Home Inspector
Chapter 19
Note: To start at the beginning of this book,
see Cheap Homes For Sale
Should you do your own pre-purchase inspection or hire a home
inspector? Both. You should inspect a house before you write
an offer on it. Then you should put an inspection contingency
clause in the offer, and hire a professional inspector. Why do
both?
Doing your own inspection can help you get a better deal.
Each cracked window or leaky toilet you can find is a negotiating
point. See the section on negotiating for more on how to use
your own inspection to get a lower price.
Pay for a professional pre-purchase inspection. Unless you
really know a lot, it can save your neck financially. An acquaintance
of mine just discovered that the house he made an offer on was
almost beyond hope, because their was so much termite and other
damage. He backed out of the deal, and considering the tens of
thousands of damage he hadn't planned on, I don't think he's
regretting the $300 he spent on inspections.
Do a walk-through inspection yourself, by all means. Just
also put that clause in the contract allowing you to have professional
inspections too. Now, how do you choose the right person to do
the inspections? Carefully.
Choosing A Home Inspector
For specific inspections that are customary in your area,
you can rely on most reputable companies. Termite inspections
are the norm here in Tucson, for example, and it's cheap to get
one done by a pest control company (they hope to get the job
if there are termites to be eradicated). If the roof has obvious
problems, you can get a roofer to take a look and give you an
itemized quote.
For general pre-purchase inspections, though, it isn't as
easy to hire the right person. In many states it is relatively
easy to get licensed for general home inspection. What you really
want, though, is not someone that read the right books and passed
a test, but an inspector with real life experience. Ideally,
you want a former builder or tradesman that has real experience
with everything from electrical work to roofing to plumbing and
more.
You want to know what is wrong, but you also want to know
what it will cost to fix these problems. Not all inspectors will
have that information for you. Ask if they can give you estimates
for repairing any problem they find, even if only in the form
of a range of the possible cost. You may be renegotiating the
price based on his findings. You could call in contractors to
get quotes on big problems, but you need to at least know which
are big problems, and a good inspector should be able to tell
you.
To sum up: Do your own walk-through inspection, then hire
a professional home inspector. Ask about their experience. Ask
if they can note estimated costs next to problems found. If you
want to learn more, ask if maybe you can tag along for the inspection.
Finally, to save on the inspection fee, call several qualified
home inspectors. Sometimes the newer ones charge less and are
just as good or better, if they came from a career in the building
trades.
This chapter continues here: Find
a Home Inspector
Your Cheap Home | Home Inspector |