GuitarGuyLP":1kwd2qdk said:
That is why you need an independent inspector, and be there when he goes around the house. If you are paying him he will let you know about everything. If there are problems, and he tells you about it you would probably use him again. If the bank, or seller hires the inspector I wouldn't trust him.
I would agree and go a step further to say, don't just go with your independent home
inspector, go with him and TEAR THAT SHIT APART (the current owners won't, or shouldn't, be there). The damndest things will show up
after you move in, so before you put your money down, go over every inch of the place with a fine toothed comb. Use the home inspector, but don't trust him or anybody else to find everything for you. If you are friends with any contractors/plumbers/carpenters/exterminators(!)/priests, buy them lunch and have them come along too.
Example - my first house, the home inspection was pretty clean. One of the very few things that turned up was that the water was turned off to one shower and you couldn't get to the valve without opening a panel that had been painted/caulked shut. You can probably already see where this is going. So OK, no problem, I thought. They'll open the panel, turn on the water, and done deal. My first shower in the new house was not only a shower for me, but a shower coming out the can light in the ceiling directly under me, on the floor below.
The first rainstorm, the front entry flooded. Turns out it was a known problem in this neighborhood of townhouses (same builder/design). Did anybody mention it? Did the realtor who had sold umpteen houses in this neighborhood mention it? No. Did the next door neighbor (your new 'buddy') mention it? No, but hey after we moved in, it turns out he's a contractor and can fix it for $6k. Thanks, buddy!
So, just some random tips off the top of my head in addition to what has already been mentioned, re: inspection.
1. If at all possible, go during bad weather...ie rainstorm.
2. Run all appliances/systems for a good length of time. Full dishwasher load, washer/dryer, oven, microwave. Crank the AC. Crank the heat.
3. Run every faucet/shower/hose for at
least 20-30 minutes, hot and cold. Flush every toilet multiple times.
4. See any spots outside where you'd suspect a possible roof/window/whatever leak? Get the garden hose on them and find out.
5. Look over, under, and behind everything.
6. Open and shut all the doors firmly (in other words, slam them), open and shut all the windows, feel/push on all the walls (don't ask me how I learned about that one) and tile surrounds in the baths.
You get the idea. Test everything to the point where if it was going to fail under reasonable circumstances, you'll see it fail.