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Inspections

Hello! We are FTH, and are in our due diligence period for a home. Our offer was accepted last week We have the home/termite/pool inspection all lined up for 9-1pm. Our real estate agent is super thorough That being said... we put in an offer after seeing the home at the open house. My question is: while we're at the house during the inspections, what should WE be mindful of, looking for, double checking, etc? What are things that might not be included in an inspection that we want to consider during the due diligence period, since we will have that access to the house ? submitted by /u/Reasonable_Art3872 [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1rot1k3/inspections/
Recent posts

Please help

I am currently applying for an apartment and encountering difficulties with the third-party verification process for proof of income. As a contractor, I do not receive conventional pay stubs. Instead, my employer provides PDFs of account transactions from the previous year to the present, including dates, my name, confirmation numbers, and amounts. However, the third party does not recognize these PDFs as valid pay stubs. Linking my bank account resulted in an inaccurate calculation of my monthly income as $58.33, despite my actual monthly earnings ranging from $6,000 to $10,000. When I submitted bank statements from my personal account, the system rejected them, stating that it does not accept business bank statements. I am unable to upload tax transcripts for 2024/2025 since I began working for this company in June 2025. With only 72 hours to complete this process and over 48 hours already elapsed, would a formal offer letter be an acceptable form of verification at this stage? ...

Do home sensors actually help with insurance claims or premiums?

Hi everyone, I’m trying to decide whether it’s worth installing additional sensors around my house (things like water leak sensors, temperature monitors, humidity sensors, etc.). I’m less interested in the smart-home convenience side and more curious about whether these devices actually matter from an insurance perspective. A few things I’m wondering: Do home sensors ever help with claims or investigations after something like water damage, fire, or frozen pipes? Are there specific types of sensors that insurers actually consider useful (water leak, smoke, temperature, humidity, electrical monitoring, etc.)? If a homeowner had historical sensor data showing something like temperature drops, water leaks, or electrical anomalies, would that realistically help in a claim situation? Do insurers ever offer discounts or incentives for homes that have monitoring devices installed? From your experience, what kind of data or monitoring would actually be valuable evidence if something ...

Sometimes you have to laugh at the process

I posted in r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer that we closed. Our house was unoccupied and close got delayed, so the seller gave us early occupancy to start moving, since my landlord plans to occupy my current house. And then it went sideways. We aren't done with close, but its going to eventually go through. Im not posting this as a rant, or complaint. But more so as a reminder to those reading these subs that each person goes through a different process and some take time. We were supposed to close 3/2. The day before close title calls and says they need a certified POA from the seller's daughter and the original doctors letter. The homeowner is 83 and her daughter is selling the house to pay for her care. No sweat. Then title calls and says they've found a deed in trust on the house from 1993. The bank on it no longer exists. Great. This was the initial delay. Seller finds the paperwork for the deed in trust, and provides title all the documents. We are now going to close 3/6 ...

TH in PA, new vs old?

I have a few general and sort of specific questions regarding which direction we should take in potentially selling a SFH and buying a TH. I grew up in a twin and lived in apartments half my life so I'm no stranger to shared wall living. Bought a SFH and our neighbors built a pool so close to our fence I could literally high-five her from the fence line. With neighbors like them there's really no point in SFH unless we move wayyy out. So we're thinking TH, cheaper and more space. However, I'm terrified of bugs. If we buy a place, and due to the building or neighbors bringing in pests, I will literally spiral. Should we look for a newer expensive build that's a bit further out from things ~40 minute drive everywhere. Or buy an already built unit (that maybe has a sliver of yard) but they are way more affordable (So I'm thinking chances are they are going to bring in more people/renters/possibly bugs)? What should we be looking for? submitted by /u/Catfe...

What would you do if you were in my specific situation? Does my plan make sense?

I'm a single 38 year old man. I bought a house at the end of 2020. I really like my house and neighborhood to a lesser extent. I have a 2.5% interest rate on it. My total monthly housing payment is $1,443 right now. That might decrease. I'm considered a disabled veteran, & I might be approved for a property tax exemption. I have a guaranteed income by the VA that's supposed to be for the remainder of my life. I think the economy is about to crash soon. There's a lot of uncertainty with the American economy. My house is currently for sale. I haven't received any offers yet. My plan is to sell my house and walk away with about $50k - $60k with no debt. Then wait for the economy to crash, rent for 1 or 2 years and try to buy a new house when the economy has bottomed out. submitted by /u/BigBlueEyes87 [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1rn3d85/what_would_you_do_if_you_were_in_my_specific/

Would you buy a house with a fully concrete front yard in TX?

Looking at a nice house that was built in the early 2000s, was a model home at the time and it had the entire front yard covered in concrete like a parking lot, I’m assuming to make it easier to show the house? Anyhow, now the original owner is selling it after they already had an estate sale, and it’s still on the market over 90 days in with no price drops and multiple open houses. It sits at the end of a culdesac on about 1/3 pie shaped lot of an acre and has a nice backyard and greenbelt, but the curb appeal is rough with the front yard like that. It also has a drain easement next to the lot, so I’m not sure if I could rip up some of the concrete next to it to add some green space. submitted by /u/FearThePecker [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1rmc3by/would_you_buy_a_house_with_a_fully_concrete_front/

Renting to own

Hello everyone, I am looking to talk to my landlord about potentially asking for the option so I am renting to own the home we have been renting for about 5 years. I have a few questions. How should I best go about this What should I expect What should I bring to to the table Thanks in advance! submitted by /u/Benn_Of_Trades [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1rm8uwi/renting_to_own/

Under the table land title

Hello everyone! Tanong ko lang is safe ba or ginagawa ba talaga usually ang under the table na pag process ng pag transfer ng land title? Yung broker kasi namin in selling our property, gusto mapadali ang pag transfer ng land title dahil kinukulit daw sya ng "client" nya. Yung title kase neto bahay namen e nasa pangalan pa ng late grand parents ko so need pa itransfer to our name (heirs) Takot daw sya baka maghanap na daw ng ibang properties around our area kung hindi mapabilis. Eh samen naman, di naman kami nagmamadali. But yun nga, lagi nya kami minamadali with all the processing. Para nya kaming laging pinepressure.I'm just concern kasi sabi nya kaya daw nya mapabilis ang process ng pag transfer. Pwede daw nya iexpedite yung release ng title para yung almost 2 months na waiting eh maging 4 days nalang daw. So ang sabi nya may expedite fee daw yun na 10k. Tapos willing pa sya ishoulder yung 10k na yun. Okay lang ba yun? Ginagawa ba talaga yun? Sorry I just want to m...

Is there a common chronic illness pattern with ladies in real estate?

My wife is an alternative medicine health practitioner. We've now seen the 4th real estate professional come to her and they have some fairly similar symptoms. I'm curious, has anyone else has seen any patterns in your networks of ladies battling similar chronic type illnesses, and what symptoms may look like? submitted by /u/Specialist_Speed_17 [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1rligtj/is_there_a_common_chronic_illness_pattern_with/