• Buyer’s Tips & Articles

    What Your Home Inspection Should Cover

    Siding: Look for dents or buckling

    Foundations: Look for cracks or water seepage

    Exterior Brick: Look for cracked bricks or mortar pulling away from bricks

    Insulation: Look for condition, adequate rating for climate

    Doors and Windows: Look for loose or tight fits, condition of locks, condition
    of weatherstripping

    Roof: Look for age, conditions of flashing, pooling water, buckled shingles,
    or loose gutters and downspouts

    Ceilings, walls, and moldings: Look for loose pieces, drywall that is pulling
    away

    Porch/Deck: Loose railings or step, rot

    Electrical: Look for condition of fuse box/circuit breakers, number of outlets
    in each room

    Plumbing: Look for poor water pressure, banging pipes, rust spots or corrosion
    that indicate leaks, sufficient insulation

    Water Heater: Look for age, size adequate for house, speed of recovery,
    energy rating

    Furnace/Air Conditioning: Look for age, energy rating; Furnaces are rated
    by annual fuel utilization efficiency; the higher the rating, the lower your
    fuel costs. However, other factors such as payback period and other operating
    costs, such as electricity to operate motors.

    Garage: Look for exterior in good repair; condition of floor—cracks,
    stains, etc.; condition of door mechanism

    Basement: Look for water leakage, musty smell

    Attic: Look for adequate ventilation, water leaks from roof

    Septic Tanks (if applicable): Adequate absorption field capacity for the
    percolation rate in your area and the size of your family

    Driveways/Sidewalks: Look for cracks, heaving pavement, crumbling near edges,
    stains

    Reprinted from REALTOR® Magazine Online by permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
    Copyright 2005. All rights reserved.

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