by Haybaler » Mon Mar 01, 2010 9:09 pm
Let's try to flesh this idea out a bit....
So, you just spent $350 on a deluxe home inspection to CYA because you are a prudent buyer. It turns up some interesting stuff....things you would never have thought to look at, and if you had looked at wouldn't have known what you were seeing.
The house needs a new roof, dry rot in the bathroom floors, aluminum wiring and no ground wire, remodel work done without permits and not to code, no insulation in the attic or crawl space, leaky windows, exhaust fans vent into the crawl space and attic but not to the atmosphere, mold, improper sized circuit breakers in the panel, environmental hazards,.....etc, etc, etc,.... You get estimates to remedy the issues and begin to negotiate w/ the seller/ lender....the deal fails because you are no fool and they don't want to give in...
How much time do you want to spend trying to re-coup your $350?
Not very much because you have a real job and a life and you are trying to buy another home. How would you be able to know who the next potential buyer is to make your info available to them?...
But most importantly, the problem with an inspection report is that it is a snapshot in time. The seller could do some of the work, (or cover up the damages with a coat of paint). Conditions change.
I think you need to look at your inspection expense as the best $350 you could have spent to save yourself from repairs and heartache, not a reimbursable, share-able bill.