1 / 48

Home Inspection 101 For Real Estate Professionals

Home Inspection 101 For Real Estate Professionals. Independently owned and operated. Course Objective. This course will leave you with the following: A good understanding of the home inspection process How to manage your client’s expectations of the home inspection

armen
Télécharger la présentation

Home Inspection 101 For Real Estate Professionals

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Home Inspection 101 For Real Estate Professionals Independently owned and operated

  2. Course Objective This course will leave you with the following: • A good understanding of the home inspection process • How to manage your client’s expectations of the home inspection • How to increase your client’s satisfaction and lower your liability.

  3. Inspection Completes the Sale Information gathered from an inspection helps bring together buyers and sellers. • Information leads to knowledge • Knowledge leads to understanding • Understanding leads to agreement Inspectors should understand their role in the sales process. Buyers, sellers and real estate professionals all have a role in the sales process.

  4. Goals of Inspection • To share unbiased information about major components and safety issues • To discuss repair, maintenance or safety issues beforehand • To move the sale forward

  5. Informed Buyers • Most buyers know little about construction • Answering questions puts mind at ease • Informed buyers are better satisfied and can better anticipate and plan for repairs and maintenance • Real estate professionals can focus on the next sale

  6. Common Documents Associated With a Home Inspection • Preinspection agreement: Defines scope of inspection, standards used and fee charged • Home inspection report: Should be clear and concise, and incorporate photos

  7. Inspection Report Formats Formats vary: • Checklist or narrative • Combination checklist and narrative • Computer-generated • Handwritten • Oral (from a friend with no report) • May or may not include summary • May or may not include photos • Delivered at time of inspection or later

  8. Report Basics In any case reports should: • Be clear and concise • Adhere to the standards of practice as per major trade groups (ASHI, NAHI, NACHI) • Cover all major components • Be delivered in a timely fashion • Define terms used therein: “acceptable,” “marginal,” “defective,” etc. Who owns the inspection report?

  9. Professional Home Inspector Characteristics of a good inspector: • Trained, thorough and unbiased • Courteous, professional and has the necessary tools and equipment • Adheres to industry standards • Has good written and oral communication skills • Is insured and, if applicable, licensed

  10. Insurance Coverage for a Professional Inspector • Should carry general liability insurance • Should carry E&O insurance • Many E&O policies have a “referral” endorsement

  11. Inspection Reduces Complaints/Liability Source: FREA

  12. What an Inspector Should Do • Adhere to industry standards of practice and code of ethics (ASHI, NAHI, NACHI) • Inspect readily accessible systems and components • Report: • Systems/components that aren’t working properly • Recommendations to correct • Explanation of the deficiencies • Reasons with fact that certain systems or components were not inspected

  13. What an Inspector Should Not Do • Predict remaining life of system or component • Offer advice on methods, materials, costs to fix component —unless qualified to do so • Offer to make repairs, refer specific contractors or receive referral fees • Comment on market value • Perform code inspections

  14. Educate the Buyer

  15. Order the Home Inspection • Immediately after reaching written purchase agreement with home seller • Advise buyer what to look for in an inspector • Advise buyer where and how to find a good inspector

  16. Explain the Scope of the Inspection A good inspector: • Explains the scope and limitations of an inspection: visual review of readily accessible areas, random sampling of like items, etc. • Invites the buyer along for the inspection • Explains how long the inspection will take, what it will cost and when the client can expect delivery of the inspection report • Discusses their training, experience and affiliations

  17. Set Realistic Expectations • Very few homes are in perfect condition • This sale went through, even though it had severe wind damage, because the buyer better understood what had happened

  18. Preparing the Seller

  19. How to Prepare for a Property Inspection • Secure pets • Turn off alarms • Remove obstructions to: • Furnace and water heater • Electrical panel • Attic • Garage • Crawl space, etc.

  20. After the Inspection A good inspector will: • Leave things the way he/she found them • Verify that the furnace/AC is running and return thermostat to original setting • Turn off lights or running water • Make sure doors are locked, etc.

  21. The Inspection Process: Grounds

  22. Grading and Drainage • Great curb appeal, but the inspector is looking for positive drainage • Water is the No. 1 issue in most homes • Need positive drainage on all four sides of the house • Most drainage issues are easy to fix

  23. Driveway, Walkway and Steps • Loose or missing handrails (inside/outside) are a safety issue • Driveway/sidewalk/patios: • Heaving • Differential settlement • Excessive gaps • Are tripping hazards but easy to repair

  24. Porches, Stoops, Decks, Balconies, Patios • Ledger board should be bolted to the structure • Railing should have proper height and spacing • Railings/hand railings should be firmly attached • Support posts and stair stringers should have no earth-to-wood contact • Decks can be expensive, but are fairly easy to repair

  25. The Inspection Process: Exterior

  26. Exterior • Trees can abrade roofs, heave driveways and sidewalks • Tree roots can affect foundations, sewer lines, etc. • Other vegetation should be kept away from siding, air conditioners, etc.

  27. Roofing System Inspection of roof: • Estimate age • Number of layers • Type of materials • Leaking or not • Types of valleys • Flashing

  28. Chimneys • Chimneys are a frequent maintenance issue and can be expensive to repair. • Inspect for: • Proper alignment • Proper height • Flashed property • Lined and capped

  29. Siding and Trim • There are many exterior coverings, including wood, vinyl, stucco, brick, stone and synthetics • Some are more high-maintenance than others • Vegetation can affect siding

  30. Windows and Doors Inspect for: • Operation • Alignment • Weather stripping • Evidence of leaks

  31. Garages • A single garage door such as this one receives a lot of use • Examining the operation, tracks, springs, openers and fit are important • For child safety, “auto reverse” is a must

  32. Pools, Hot Tubs and Spas • Swimming pools and hot tubs are high-maintenance • Could involve filters, skimmers, gas, electric or solar heat, a pool house, etc. • Must have a self-closing gate with a 6-foot-high security fence

  33. Irrigation Systems Sprinklers are mostly out of sight, but not out of mind: • Underground leaks/erosion can greatly impact driveways, sidewalks, etc. • Poorly placed heads can lead to water intrusion in the basement, etc. • In the best case, sprinklers are high maintenance.

  34. Miscellaneous Inspections Some inspections might require specialists: • Well inspections • Septic inspections • Water potability tests • Seawalls, private docks • Other: Termite, radon, mold, etc.

  35. The Inspection Process: Electrical

  36. Electrical Inspect for adequacy and safety: • Amperage/voltage • Service cable • Panel • Branch circuits • Grounding • Wire conductor • GFCI • Smoke detectors

  37. GFCI Current standards require GFCI protection: • GFCI bathrooms • GFCI all kitchen countertops • GFCI unfinished basements • GFCI garages • GFCI crawl spaces • GFCI all outside electrical outlets • AFCI in bedrooms

  38. Smoke Detectors • National safety standards require smoke detectors • Can be battery-operated, hard-wired or both • Can be monitored by a security company • Some areas require one outside each bedroom • Now in some areas they are in each bedroom and living area • Inspectors activate test button only

  39. The Inspection Process: Other

  40. Plumbing and Fixtures • Water is the No. 1 concern: plumbing; plumbing fixtures are a significant part of inspection • Inspector is looking for leaks, adequate flow and pressure. • Are drains plugged or sluggish?

  41. Plumbing Plumbing leaks can also damage: • Cabinets and vanities • Wall behind shower tile • Subfloors, ceilings below

  42. HVAC System • Overall size, age and condition of unit • Proper location of unit • Adequate combustion air • Adequate temperature rise • Heat source in each room • Condition, size and location of ducts • Condition of blower/humidifier • Heat exchanger (mostly hidden) • Exhaust system (check for flue gases and other leaks) • Dirty filters obstruct flow and affect temperature rise • Thermostat — unit responds to normal controls Check for adequate heating (gas furnace):

  43. HVAC System • Overall size, age and condition of unit • Outside unit, clean, level and up off the ground, suction line insulated • No obstructions interfering with unit • Discharging heat-ambient test • Adequate temperature drop (14 to 22 degrees) • Blower clean and variable speed • Dirty filters obstruct flow and affect temperature drop • Thermostat — unit responds to normal controls Check for adequate cooling:

  44. The Inspection Process: Interior

  45. Kitchen • Cabinets:Countertops, tile and backsplashes • Stove:Operable burners, not timers • Disposal:Inspect for smooth operation, excessive noise • Dishwasher:condition, leaking, proper air-gap device • Ventilator:Recirculating/noncirculating • Other Built-ins:Microwave, trash compactor, refrigerator, etc.

  46. Bathrooms • Can be most expensive areas to replace/refurbish • With simple maintenance, expensive repairs can be avoided

  47. Walls, Ceilings and Floors • Walls, ceilings and floors can be covered by a wide variety of materials • Inspector checks for deflection/tolerance in floors, bowing or cracking in walls, cracks, stains or wet spots in ceilings • Operation and fit of doors and windows from the inside

  48. Thank you for your time! Contact:

More Related