| Disclosures
Although you have toured the property, looked at the walls and
ceiling, turned on the faucets and played with the light switches,
you have not lived in it. The seller has years of knowledge about
his or her home and there may be some things you want to find out
about as quickly as possible. For this reason, you will require
certain disclosures as part of your offer.
Basically, you want the seller to disclose any adverse conditions
that may have a substantial impact on your decision to purchase
the home. This would include any problems with the house, whether
the property is in a flood zone, a noise zone, or any other kind
of hazardous area.
If you have an agent representing you, this is almost automatic,
but many states do not require individuals selling their own home
to provide you with this information. Often they do not require
banks selling foreclosed property to provide these disclosures,
either. Obtaining these types of disclosures should always be a
part of your offer, and time is of the essence.
Condition of the Property
The last thing you want when you assume possession of your new
home is to find it in a total mess. Therefore, you should make it
clear in your offer that certain minimum standards are required.
If you do not, you might find out the seller or neighbors have begun
using the back yard as a trash dump, or something worse –
and you would not be able to do anything about it.
Some of the requirements you might want to include in your offer
are that the roof does not leak, the appliances work, the plumbing
does not leak, that there are no broken or cracked windows, the
yard has been kept up, and any debris has been cleared away.
Home Inspections
Besides appraisal and the termite inspection, you should also have
a professional go through the house and seek out potential problems.
Of course, you will have inspected the home, but you are not used
to looking at some things that a professional will find. Even if
they are not things the seller is expected to repair, at least you
will have foreknowledge of any potential problems.
The seller will want this inspection performed quickly, so that
you can approve the results and move forward with the purchase.
Once you receive the inspection, you will want to allow yourself
sufficient time to review and approve the report. If you do not
approve the report, you may negotiate with the sellers on which
repairs should be performed and who should pay for those repairs.
Otherwise, you can cancel the purchase without penalty, provided
you have included timetables in your offer.
Allow a maximum of ten to fifteen days to receive the report and
five days to review it.
Final Walk-Through Inspection
Before closing, you will want to revisit the property to ensure
it is in the condition you have required in your offer, and to inspect
that any required repairs have been performed. You should do this
no sooner than five days before you intend to close. Make sure this
right to do a final inspection is included in your offer to purchase
the home.
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