Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Preparing Your Home For The Inspection

Home inspections can be a major source of stress for people selling their homes.  If you’re selling your home and want to make your inspection go better, the easiest and most obvious thing to do would be to hire your own private inspector to go through your house before the buyers have it inspected.  This is a seller’s inspection.  If you don’t want to have this done, there are still a few simple things you can do to make the buyer’s inspection go better.  This advice also applies to Truth-in-Housing Inspections.

Change your furnace filter. This is the simplest no-brainer.  When I inspect a house and find a nasty furnace filter, I’ll often recommend having the furnace and ductwork cleaned.  A dirty filter also shows a lack of maintenance and care for your home.

Dirty furnace filter


Fix electrical hazards. This seems like an easy one, but it’s a very common problem that sometimes has easy fixes. Any extension cords that are being used in lieu of permanent wiring should be removed, and outlets installed if necessary.  The two most common places are at garage door openers and water softeners.  Also, go through your home and look for missing cover plates – look at outlets, light switches, and junction boxes.  Here are the most common places to find missing cover plates:

  • The garage, especially at the outlet for the opener
  • The kitchen – behind the fridge, behind the stove, above the microwave, and under the kitchen sink.
  • In the laundry room
  • Unfinished basement areas
Unsafe electrical wiring



Fix plumbing leaks. This should be another no-brainer, but to be sure, go through your home and test all of your plumbing fixtures for leaks.  Repair or replace your laundry sink faucet if it leaks around the stem or the handles.  Fill up every sink with four inches of water, let it drain, and carefully examine the drain lines for any leaks. To test your shower for leaks, read my blog on how to find shower leaks.

Leaking laundry sink


Test your garage door opener. Place a 2x4 flat on ground and let the overhead door close on it.  If the door goes back up, it’s working the way it should.  If it doesn’t, adjust the sensitivity settings on your opener so it auto-reverses when it hits the 2x4.  If you can’t get this happen, replace the opener.  Warning: this test could cause damage to your opener, and some home inspectors won’t do this test.


Defective garage door opener


Check your gutters and downspouts. Clean your gutters, and repair any leaking joints.  Make sure all of your downspout extensions are properly connected, and make sure they drain well away from the house – six to ten feet is ideal.

Leaking gutter


Make everything accessible. If your attic access is in a closet, move whatever personal belongings you have that would prevent access to the attic.  If you have a crawl space, make sure that area is accessible as well.  If it looks like items have been stored to intentionally block access to an area, it raises red flags.

Reuben Saltzman, Structure Tech Home Inspections - Email - Minneapolis Home Inspections

No comments:

Post a Comment