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The Seller's Advantage in a Buyer's Market

Jan. 24, 2008

Submitted by: Alan Fastman, Helpful Home Inspectors


In today’s buyer-friendly real estate market, a seller needs every advantage he or she can get.

One way for your listing client to improve the position of his or her home in this marketplace is to hire a professional home inspector to perform a pre-sale or pre-listing inspection. Pre-listing inspections inform a seller and a seller’s agent of the issues most likely to be raised during a buyer’s pre-purchase inspection. Armed with this information, you might advise your client to make repairs, or to disclose the defects and adjust the asking price accordingly. Either way, the potential for deal-breaking discoveries at the tail end of the sales process is reduced.

Your seller might ask, "Why would I go to the extra expense of a home inspection when the buyer is going to hire her own inspector anyway?" The answer is simple. Anticipating issues that may be raised by the buyer’s inspector can actually save the seller money and help to avoid every seller’s nightmare – having the deal fall through at the last minute due to unexpected problems.

In the best of times, problems uncovered by the buyer’s inspector can cost a seller money and delay closing. In today’s market, buyers can afford to be even more demanding. A buyer may demand a reduction in price that is greater than the actual cost of repairs. Or, if a seller is asked to make repairs, they will need to be made on the buyer’s rather that the seller’s terms and the seller will need to act quickly and will not have the advantage of shopping around for competitive bids from contractors. Your client could waste a lot of money by being forced into paying for a rush job at the last minute. By correcting problems in advance, the home is made more attractive to prospective buyers and repairs have cost less.

Often it is not the severity of the defects, but the sheer number of defects listed that turns a buyer off. Although a pre-listing inspection may not reveal every single issue to be included in a buyer’s inspection report, it will certainly give the seller the opportunity to minimize the negative impact of a long list of deficiencies.

If the seller chooses not to make repairs, a buyer is more likely to accept a home "as is" if the defects are disclosed in advance and reflected in the asking price than if they are discovered after a price has been set and agreed upon. Also, an inspection report that reveals no major defects may help substantiate a higher asking price. A pre-listing inspection will help you help your client to price the home correctly – an absolute must in today’s market.

A pre-listing inspection adds credibility to a seller’s disclosure and tells buyers that here is a conscientious seller. If a buyer is torn between two houses, they may feel more comfortable with your listing.