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What to Do After a Bad Home Inspection
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What to Do After a Bad Home Inspection

Your options when the report is worse than you hoped.

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Your options when the report is worse than you hoped. This guide is written for Twin Cities metro home buyers by Home Inspectors Twin Cities.

what to do after a bad home inspection — Home Inspectors Twin Cities

The report came back worse than you hoped. Before you panic or walk, work the problem in order.

Separate severity from volume

A 50-item report can still be a fundamentally sound house, and a 5-item report can contain a deal-ending structural problem. Re-read for the safety and major-system findings only, and set the cosmetic noise aside for now.

Get specialist scopes on the big items

For anything structural, electrical-systemic, or water/mold-related, bring in the appropriate licensed specialist for a real evaluation and number. The inspector's job was to find and flag; the specialist's job is to scope and price.

Re-open negotiation with facts

Armed with real numbers, go back to the seller for a credit, price reduction, or repair — focused on the few items that matter. Many "bad" inspections become fair deals at this stage.

Know when to walk

If the major items carry large cost and high uncertainty, and the seller will not move, walking away is a valid and sometimes correct outcome. The inspection contingency exists precisely so you can. A lost earnest-money fight is far cheaper than a five-figure post-closing surprise.

Most 'bad' inspections become fair deals

It is worth saying plainly: a long or alarming report is the normal case, not the disaster case. The structured path — triage, specialist scopes on the big items, fact-based renegotiation — resolves the large majority of these into a fair deal. Walking away is the right move only when the major items carry both large cost and high uncertainty and the seller will not move. The contingency exists so that remains your choice.

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