Auctions are a funny thing – once the hammer falls if you win you can’t back out no matter what. So what do you do regarding building / pest inspections? Do you spend the $600+ for each auction you attend / hope to win? Or is there some sort of way around this massive risk?
Conversely, say I have a dodgy house that has serious problems e.g. termites or structural issues. What's to stop me from doing a quick fix that will hide the problem for long enough for the entire auction process?
Unfortunately, that is one of the major challenges that I see in trying to buy houses via the auction process. We have purchased well over 100 houses in Queensland and always had a building and pest inspection done on the property every single time. It is a bit of a gamble paying good money for building and pest inspection before the auction HOPING that you will be the winning bid.
In a perfect world, it would make sense to have a building and pest report completed prior to the property going to auction from a panel of inspectors. The report can be transferred over to the new purchaser and the new purchaser is required to pay for the building and pest report up and above the auction price received on the day. For the potential buyer, it would give them the reassurance on what they are actually buying. For the seller, it would encourage a much more bigger pool of potential bidders at the auction.
I agree; as a seller, have the pest and building inspection reports completed by nationally recognised companies who include a warranty in their DETAILED report. Make sure to advise them in writing that you and the buyer will be relying on their report as an investment and that damages will result if faults are not discovered…it make cost a little more up front but you will recover them later. Then add the reports to the purchase contract…this will provide assurance to any prospective buyer and speed up the entire process. Have a special clause included in the sale of land contract that provides for he buyer to pay for these reports on settlement. The buyer can get a 2nd report if they wish but they pay for that one as well. As a buyer, ask that the inspections be paid for by the seller but with a written agreement to pay for the reports (up to a stated figure) if you complete the purchase of the property. Remind them that they can use this report for other buyers if you decide not to buy (for whatever reason). If they are not will to pony up the expense even with your written guarantee of payment, ask yourself if this is the property for you.
If you are in Sydney and are paying $600 for a pest and building inspection, you are getting ripped off!. Had inspection done by Acquired Property Consultants http://www.acquiredproperty.com.au. They charge $380 for both pest and building combined and the inspector actually calls you after the inspection to talk to you about the property prior to sending the report through.
Home purchasers forking out expenses to unfit building controllers
While hunting down another home with a financial plan of about $3 million, acupuncturist Hong Lau turned down the shot of purchasing existing irritation and building reports offered to her by land operators on two properties.
She dismissed the establishment reports authorized by the operators in light of the fact that “right off the bat I didn’t know who did the report and I didn’t feel I could ask that individual inquiry. Besides you don’t get the advantage of a building monitor taking you through the property and demonstrating to all of you the deformities.”
Rather, Lau charged her own particular pre-buy provides details regarding four properties in Sydney’s Bondi Beach from experienced building advisor Chris Dyce, executive of Informed Building Reports. “I was extremely happy I chose to utilize him.”
Dyce revealed that the back expansion of one house had died down. “When I moved toward the land operator about this, he was extremely disturbed that I had raised the reality it had died down.” The specialist said there was no way of it in the building examination report they had appointed and “denied it completely”. Lau chose not to offer on the house, which sold for about $3.5 million.
She wound up purchasing an alternate property, “completely mindful” that she expected to spend about $300,000 to settle the wiring and plumbing and remodel. “That had a direction on the value I was ready to pay.”
Dyce, leader of the Australian Society of Building Consultants, suggests purchasers select just experienced building monitors, who are appropriately qualified, have worked in the building business and are protected. He says a pre-buy report is totally justified regardless of the cash in the event that you get the correct examiner. “In any case, it’s a misuse of cash in the event that you get a nitwit… It can be exceptionally costly in the event that they don’t really distinguish the issues.”
This reply was modified 6 years, 2 months ago by Wilson.
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