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Home inspections are a vital ‘defect check-up’

18 Jul 2016

Property News

Brought to you by Property24

The concept of professional home inspection is not unlike a routine personal medical examination.

“Ideally, the full official inspection report - whether statutory or voluntary - should be available before a house goes on the market, thus allowing both buyer and seller to make informed decisions,” says Ennik.

“It establishes overall state of health and condition, flags areas of concern and recommends remedial action where necessary,” says property marketer Ronald Ennik, principal of Ennik Estates, the Gauteng-exclusive affiliate of London-based Christie’s International Real Estate.

“Unpleasant surprises are avoided in the process, and peace of mind is the outcome - for sellers, as well as homeowners with no intention of selling.”

With his 30-plus years’ experience in selling homes in Sandton and Johannesburg’s northern suburbs, Ennik says home sellers should be proactive, and embrace the transparency provided by professional pre-sale home inspections.

“This is irrespective of whether or not the process will become a legal requirement in terms of the, now seemingly delayed, draft Property Practitioner’s Bill (PPB),” says Ennik.

“There are now more than enough qualified home inspectors out there to provide the service professionally, given that their countrywide ranks have reportedly swelled considerably in anticipation of the proposed legislation becoming law.”

Benefits of getting a formal report

Although the time frame remains undetermined at this stage, Ennik says it is seems inevitable that every residential property sale will eventually require, by law, a formal inspection report by a properly trained and certified professional home inspector - thus making the buyer fully aware of the physical condition of the property at the start of the transaction process.

“A by-product of the exercise is that certain defects flagged in the process may well present a cost prevention or containment opportunity for homeowners themselves, irrespective of any intention to sell,” says Ennik.

“Ideally, the full official inspection report - whether statutory or voluntary - should be available before a house goes on the market, thus allowing both buyer and seller to make informed decisions.”

He says this will prevent the possibility of the buyer rebounding with a demand for a price cut - or, even worse, withdrawing the offer - on the grounds of flaws and deficiencies that were not declared upfront.

“It is therefore important that the home inspection aspect of the proposed legislation will be made compulsory, rather than discretionary,” says Ennik.

Compliance and code violations

“An important point to bear in mind is that the inspection the draft Bill calls for is focused purely on the condition of the house and is not about verifying compliance with building codes and violations, which are  entirely different issues,” says Ennik.

He says a buyer’s worst nightmare is to discover costly structural and maintenance flaws after the purchase is signed and sealed.

Meanwhile, it has become patently obvious that the current informal practice of requiring sellers to sign a ‘defect list’ prior to putting a home on the market is not only flawed, but is now virtually obsolete,” says Ennik.

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