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A Pre-Listing Whole House Inspection
1) If you were planning to do any cosmetic repairs or remodeling before
listing your house, an inspection may reveal additional defects that your cosmetic repairs could have masked. A
pre-listing inspection gives you the opportunity to fix possible underlying problems right the first time. This
saves you the time, trouble, and money of fixing a seemingly small repair, then finding out there is a larger problem,
forcing you to destroy your work, fix the underlying problem, and then do the cosmetic repair all over again. Finding a Whole House Inspector: If you are looking for a professional home inspector, Service Magic offers a locator service throughout the U.S. Simply fill out their easy form and they will contact you will the names of pre-screened Inspectors in your area. For more information, click here. What to look for in a professional inspector and inspection. NOTE: Doing a pre-listing whole house inspection does not guarantee that a buyer will not opt to have another done at the time of the contract. Nor does it guarantee that the second inspector will not find items that first did not discover (or think important enough to note). What it does guarantee, though, is evidence that you have spent the time (and the money) to make sure that the house is without defect. In addition, if you get into a contract squabble over repairs at contract time, you will have evidence backing up your position. |
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RECOMMENDED READING from Amazon.com |
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Home Inspection Handbook |
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