Selling Your House?
Get Ready for Inspection
You’ve
prepared your house for sale, hired a listing agent and the marketing plan
has succeeded so well that you have an offer on your home. All good news so
far, but you still have a couple of challenges to face, including a home
inspection.
No
matter how much you know about the place you’ve occupied for the past few years
or decades, a home inspector may find issues that your buyers will want you to
address. While there’s no guarantee that you’ll ace your inspection, you can
take steps to make it less likely that a home inspection will put an end to
your sales plan.
Consider
a Pre-Inspection
Depending
on the age and condition of your home, you may want to schedule an inspection
before you put your home on the market. If your home is relatively new and
you’re not aware of any problems, you can probably skip this step; but if you
have any concerns about your property, it could be worthwhile to spend $400 or
so to hire your own inspector. Once the inspection is done, you’ll have the
peace of mind that comes with knowing about potential problems and having the
opportunity to address them on your own time, rather than under pressure from a
buyer who wants work completed before the settlement date.
You
can and should disclose to buyers any problems your home inspector finds and
what you’ve done about them — whether you’ve made a repair, replaced an
appliance or planned to offer a credit for the buyers so they can fix it their
way.
Prepare
for the Inspection
Regardless
of whether you’ve had an inspection, your buyers are likely to hire their own
home inspector. You can be helpful to that inspector in several ways, which is
likely to make the inspector feel a little more favorable towards you and your
home. That’s not to say that the inspector would overlook a serious problem,
but perhaps he would lighten up a bit on some minor issues. Try these methods
of buttering up an inspector:
§
Remove clutter: You’ve probably
started packing a bit, but it will help the inspector more if you empty the
spaces beneath your bathroom and kitchen sinks and move any belongings that
block access to your water heater or other appliances.
§
Get your paperwork together: You should create a file
with documentation of all maintenance and repairs you’ve done on your home,
including annual or semi-annual furnace inspections, receipts for roof or
chimney repairs and other inspections. If you’ve had an insurance claim on your
house, keep those papers together, too, so you can prove that you took care of
the problem.
§
Provide complete access to your home: Make sure you
unlock gates and doors to a shed or garage that don’t have lockbox access. Move
anything that’s blocking entrances to the attic, basement or storage spaces.
§
Leave home: Inspectors find it
easier to do their work without the presence of the homeowners and, even more
important, without your pets and children around.
§
Clean your house: It won’t make a bit
of difference if you have a leak, but a clean home gives the impression that
you take care of your property and so the inspector shouldn’t expect to find as
many problems.
§
Leave the lights on: Make sure your
light bulbs work, especially in storage spaces or areas you don’t often use.
The
easier you make things for a home inspector, the more favorably disposed he’ll
be toward your home.
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