This is often the first question prospective home buyers ask home inspectors. Many people think fees are the only differentiating factor among inspectors. (This is due to the fact that many home inspectors compete for business by highlighting their "low" or "competitive" fees.) What if someone answered the phone and said: "I'm not licensed, I'm the newest and least experienced inspector in the area, I provide a cheap, hard to read, hand written checklist with no photos and to prove it I charge less than all the other inspectors." Okay, maybe you won't hear that actual statement, but what is an inspector really saying when he states: "My home inspection fee is lower than other Massachusetts, New Hampshire or Maine home inspectors". Do top professionals really need to attract clients with low fees?
You've probably spent months researching for the place you will call home, but how much time have you spent researching for a MA, NH or Maine home inspector? Do you really want an inexperienced person to inspect the most expensive purchase you will ever make? What about the inspector's qualifications? What about the inspector's home inspection experience? Be aware: Some inspectors claim years of experience in home related services, but 25 years of being a carpenter, plumber, electrician or even an engineer does not qualify someone to be a home inspector. What kind of testing equipment will the inspector be using? What kind of report is provided? Have you viewed a sample report? Does it include photo documentation? If you cannot afford the best home inspector, how will you afford the items the low cost, inexperienced home inspector fails to report?
Have you verified that the inspector has a valid Home Inspector's license? Does the company or inspector have any complaints on record at the Attorney General's Office?
When asking about home inspection fees, beware of the one price fits all houses. Fees should vary according to the inspector's level of experience, qualifications, and service delivered (the type of report produced.) The size, design and age of the property also has to be figured in. Some home inspection companies state their fees run from $200 to $300, however, these "low" fees are based on an inspector doing 2 or 3 inspections per day and completing on-the-spot checklist type reports.
What kind of inspection report do you get from an inspector who does 3 inspections per day? As a service to prospective buyers we have uploaded portions of an actual checklist inspection report from a low cost home inspection company. (These documents were scanned and converted to a .pdf file. None of the scanned pages have been altered, these are exactly what the client received.)
Click to view 3 pages of an under $300 inspection report. Having a hard time trying to understand the handwritten comments on those pages? Do you see any inspection photos? Do you think this kind of report is useful? Brochures from "low cost" MA, NH and ME home inspectors can be found in many real estate agency offices. Do you think when real estate agents go to buy a house for themselves that they will use one of those "low cost" home inspectors? (You will never see brochures of highly qualified and experienced inspectors in the real estate offices.) If a thorough inspection, full narrative report and photo editing of an average size home takes 5 to 6 hours, (not counting travel time) how "thorough" is the inspector who does 3 inspections and reports in one day? What's the alternative to a quick, cheap, practically useless inspection and handwritten (difficult to decipher) checklist report?
Click to view sample inspection report from a $595 inspection.
Click to view sample inspection photos 1-6 included with report
Click to view sample inspection photos 7-12 included with report
When is a $750 inspection cheaper than a $300 one? Find out here.
Money: Let's put home inspection fees in perspective: If you're buying a $500,000 house and the inspection fee is $750, that's less than .0016% of the cost of the house! Most real estate agencies charge 3.0% to 6.0% to sell a house, that would be $15,000 to $30,000 for a $500,000 house! The cost of a MA home inspection is a bargain, even if you paid $1,600 for the inspection.If the owner of a house is willing to pay a real estate agent $15,000 to $30,000 to sell the house, is $750 too much to pay to find out the true condition of the property?
The real value of an inspection and report should be measured by its usefulness. If a home inspection report fails to help a prospective buyer fully understand what they are buying or if it doesn't provide accurate, detailed information, which the client could use in the real estate negotiation process, what good is it? See what some clients of Able Home Inspection, Inc. have said about their home inspection experience. Client Comments.
Able Home Inspection Wakefield, MA 01880 (978-499-2360)