Which is better: to have the home inspected before you make an offer, or after?
Most commonly, you will order an inspection after you know that your offer is
acceptable to the seller. If the price you are prepared to pay seems to have no
chance of buying the home, paying for an inspection ($250 - 350) is a waste of money.
Thats the conventional thinking and it usually is sound.
However, home buying is a flexible undertaking and much is dictated by the particular
circumstance in which you find yourself. It isnt always best to leave your
professional home inspection until your offer has been accepted . You could have
this carried out between offers, while the negotiation is still in progress. Perhaps
before you make your second, third, or final offer when it can be the catalyst in making
the deal. Naturally, any offer you make before the inspection will carry a
contingency clause stating that you will go through with the deal only if the results are
satisfactory to you.
A later inspection can sometimes give you even greater advantage than an early one.
Lets say you have reached agreement with the seller. You have
negotiated well and have won a good reduction in the selling price. The
sellers anticipation is heightened. He sees the deal as a done thing. He
is glad the whole process is over. Then, if the inspection reveals problems, it is
much harder for him to back out. He is far more likely to agree to a lower sale
price or, at least, pay for the repairs or replacements that are needed.
If you are a first time buyer or new to negotiating, it is probably better to negotiate
a price first. Then, have an inspection carried out and try to get the seller to pay
for any work you consider necessary or to agree to a lower price.
This Homebuyers Tip was excerpted from:
Not One Dollar More!, by Joseph Eamon Cummins, Kells Media Group, 1995.
ISBN# 0963821598