New Construction |
Homebuyers of newly constructed homes may not be aware that they may have an inspection clause included with their new home contract. Fact is a new homebuyer can greatly benefit form using a professional home inspector during the construction and completion of their new home. Many people ask; “why does a newly constructed home need an inspection? Isn’t a newly constructed home perfect and safe?” Some people assume that the builder and contractors are overseen by state or local government officials and that the local town or city building inspector checks the house out. This is true to some degree, however, few if any municipal inspectors spend anywhere near enough time in the home to fully check it out. Most counties in this part of Ohio do not require or offer a county, or local residential building inspector. Further, there could be problems with the home that are not necessarily code violations, yet have serious consequences for the new home owner. Ask any private home inspector about the deficiencies and safety issues discovered in newly constructed homes. If the buyer of a newly constructed home takes advantage of the inspection clause, the first line of defense is the exterior wall and roof frame inspection followed by the open wall or pre-dry wall/pre-insulation inspection which would be follows by the final walk through inspection. Be aware that some builders have prevented private home inspectors from inspecting newly built houses. If you are in the process of buying a new home and the builder does not allow you to bring a private home inspector on site, this poses a couple of questions; “Why won’t the builder allow a home inspector on site? What does the builder have to hide?” At this point you should be thinking hard about proceeding with the purchase and you should be consulting with your attorney. If a home owner has missed the opportunity to have an inspection during the construction phase and final walk through, there may be time to come in afterwards. Most new builders offer a warranty period for the new homeowner, however, there are usually many items not covered by the warranty as well as limitations on those that are. Even if the contractor you choose for building your house is known for quality work, the one following fact should motivate every new homebuyer to have a home inspection clause written into their contract to purchase. FACT: The Majority of construction tasks (foundation, framing, plumbing, electrical, etc) are usually subcontracted out to the lowest builder. With many separate activities going on at the same time, it’s nearly impossible for the builder/contractor to personally monitor all phases of the home construction.
|
|