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As
a home seller, chances are good that you are very proud of the home you
are putting on the market. After all, you have lived there for some
time, worked hard on the yard, and put a great deal of effort into
keeping the place warm and livable for you and your family. The chances
are good that you do not think you need an inspection because you are
sure that your home is in great shape. The chances are that you are
wrong.
As
a home ages, minor defects will crop up. Some of these you will fix and
some you consider minor annoyances that you just learn to live with.
Over time, these minor defects can grow into major problems if not
corrected, and these are just the ones of which you are aware. Many of
the items that I write up as "In Need Of Repair" are located where most
home owners never look, and are concerned with items that very few home
owners understand. These include improper gas connections and lines,
insufficient attic ventilation or clogged soffit vents, improper ground
or neutral on recepticals, improper or missing GFCI in kitchen,
bathrooms, garages or outdoors, and the list goes on and on.
Additionally, chances are GREAT
that
your home WILL BE INSPECTED before the sale. A home inspection has
become almost
automatic in any real
estate transaction, with inspections performed in well over 90% of all
home
sales. Home inspections have proven themselves over and over, by
providing
information on safety hazards, foundations, HVAC and electrical
systems,
plumbing and home structural components to the potential buyer, giving
them the
information needed to make an informed and careful decision.
A
"Pre-Listing", "Sellers" or "Pre-Sale" home inspection will provide
you, the
seller,
with the information you need to make sure the buyer's inspection
produces no deal breaking surprises. This is not a full TREC
inspection, since there is no contract pending,
however, the fee for the inspection can be PAID AT CLOSING from the
procedes of the future sale. The "Pre-Listing" inspection
gives you
the opportunity and
the choice to repair or to make allowances for any defect discovered
during the inspection. Often it is not the severity of
the defects, but the sheer number of items listed as "In Need Of
Repair" that turns a buyer off. Armed with a "Pre-Listing" home
inspection, you can reduce that number significantly, and
then use the "Pre-Listing" inspection as a selling tool, showing your
buyers that you have made some improvements and that your home
is safe and efficient.
I
hope you will spend some time on our web site
and learn more about your home and what an inspection can do for you.
If you have a question about inspections in general or any aspect of
home care, and cannot find the answer somewhere in these pages, then
do not hesitate to click "Ask
the Inspector".
When you
decide to have an inspection done, I hope you will consider letting
Tex-Pro
provide you with a quality home inspection.
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