Division Home Inspections

Inspected Once - Inspected Right!

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Maintenance Inspection Solutions


EVERY THREE YEARS

We recommend that you receive a Home Maintenance Inspection at least every three years after you have closed on your property. For about the cost of a basic automotive tune-up, a Home Maintenance Inspection can help to identify problems and damage in your home before they become an expensive or irreversible threat to your fiscal and physical well-being.


WHAT WE INSPECT, AND WHAT YOU SHOULD EXPECT

Much like a buyer-seller home inspection, a Home Maintenance Inspection is a visual examination of your home's systems, mechanicals and structure. We examine everything from roof to basement to assure that the items inspected are in proper working order. If we should discover any defects or damage [within the scope of our inspection policy], it will be noted in our thorough Home Inspection Damage Report.

Our report will review the condition of the home's heating system, central air conditioning system (temperature permitting), interior plumbing and electrical systems; the roof, attic, and visible insulation; walls, ceilings, floors, windows and doors; the foundation, basement, and visible structure.

Keep in mind that a Home Maintenance Inspection does not prevent further damage to your property, but it can help you to identify and correct existing damage that you may not know about. Our Home Maintenance Inspections are also not appraisal inspection and cannot help you to determine the value of your property (though it can help you to maintain its value). Finally, a Home Maintenance Inspection not a code inspection and does not provide you with a pass or fail score. You simply cannot fail a Home Maintenance Inspection.


MYTHS ABOUT HOME MAINTENANCE INSPECTIONS

In a recent survey, we discovered that the number one reason that more current-occupancy homeowners don't get their homes periodically inspected is simply because they aren't aware that the service is available outside of the real estate transaction period. The fact is that Home Maintenance Inspections have always been available, but they simply aren't marketed by real estate agents or most professional home inspections - and there's a reason why.

First, home-buyers and sellers have been lead to believe that only time they should be concerned about the health of a property is when an initial financial transaction is occurring, such as when a property is being sold or purchased. This is actually a bit deceiving because every month you own your home, you are engaged in making a financial transaction. You may a mortgage, right? You pay utility bills, right? So if you are going to make these payments every month, then wouldn't you want to assure that aren't paying these sums of money into an "investment" that is falling apart right under your fee or above your head? Of course not, yet tens-of-millions of people do just that because of a simple misbelief.

Second, many current-occupancy homeowners do not get a home inspection because they believe that the home inspector will find thousands-of-dollars of damage that would cause a financial strain if fixed. But regardless of what the home inspector finds, you need to know the condition of your home. The home inspector cannot force you to fix anything, nor can they condemn your property. In other words, there is no "pass" or "fail" score. There is simply knowledge, and knowledge is power. Still, most homeowners are pleasantly surprised that a home inspection discovers the kind of damage that can often be repaired for only a few dollars before such damage grows worse, and thus, cost the homeowner thousands of dollars.