Checklist for Home Inspection

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1.       Confirm that water, electric and gas service are on, with gas pilot lights burning.

2.     Ensure pets won’t hinder the inspection. They should be removed from premises or secured outside. Tell your agent about any pets at home.

3.     Replace burned out bulbs to avoid an “inoperable” report that may suggest an electrical problem.

4.     Test smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, and replace dead batteries.

5.     Clean or replace dirty HVAC air filters. They should fit securely.

6.     Remove stored items, debris and wood from foundation. These may be cited as “conducive conditions” for termites.

7.     Remove items blocking access to HVAC equipment, electric service panels, water heaters, attics and crawl spaces.

8.     Unlock areas the inspector must access such as attic doors or hatches, electric service panels, closets, fence gates and crawl spaces.

9.     Trim tree limbs to 10′ from the roof and shrubs from the house to allow access.

10.  Attend to broken or missing items like doorknobs, locks and latches; window panes, screens and locks; gutters, downspouts and chimney caps.

Call me at 818-266-2267 or check our website link below for further details or any information on our home inspection services.

 

Shawn Blaney,

President,

West Coast Home Inspections

http://www.westcoast-inspections.com/

 

Home inspection for the home buyer can make your dream home a worry-free reality. This is our mission statement at West Coast Home Inspections.

 

 

 

Quick Fixes for Selling Your Home

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Quick fixes before selling a home always pay off, but which repairs bring the biggest return? Specific answers to this often-asked question largely depend on a variety of factors such as:

·                    Time of year

·                    Location of the home

·                    Market temperature

·                    Competing inventory

Here are some suggested home repairs that can add to your profit margin when selling your home. 

Flooring Fixes

·                    Hardwood Floors
If your home has hardwood floors, that’s what buyers want, and it would pay to have the carpeting removed and the floors refinished.

·                    Carpeting
If your sub-floor is plywood, then replace the carpeting with light tan. Neutral carpeting is your best bet for resale.

·                    Ceramic
Replace chipped or cracked tiles. Clean or replace the grout. But don’t install ceramic (it’s too expensive) unless it’s for aesthetic reasons in an entry way.

Paint Ceilings & Walls

Buyers spend more time than you would think staring at ceilings. They are looking for signs of a leaky roof, but what you don’t want them to see are stains from grease or smoke and ceiling cracks. Ditto for walls. Nothing says freshness like new paint, and it’s the most cost effective improvement. Use fiberglass tape on large cracks, cover with joint compound and sand. Paint a neutral color such as light tan - think of coffee with cream.

·                    Wallpaper
It’s not that all buyers hate wallpaper. They hate your wallpaper - because it’s your personal choice, not theirs. And they hate all dated wallpaper. Get rid of it. The easiest way is to steam it off by using an inexpensive wallpaper remover steamer.

·                    Wood paneling
Even if your wood paneling is not real wood but composite, you can paint it. Dated paneling must go. Older wood paneling such as walnut, mahogany, cedar and pine, it’s all gone out of style. Paint it a neutral and soft color after priming it.

·                    Textured ceilings
Older popcorn ceilings with the “sparkles” often contain asbestos and if disturbed are health hazards. Say goodbye to it. But even recently sprayed ceilings turn off buyers. It’s not expensive but it is time consuming to remove. Lay down drop cloths and scrape it off. You will need to repaint.

Kitchen Improvements

Appliances and cabinets are typically the most expensive items to replace in a kitchen. If you don’t have to replace them, you’ll save a ton of money. However, if your cabinets are dated and beat-up, your house might not sell if the cabinets aren’t replaced.

·                    Cabinets
Resurfacing is your best option. This involves attaching a thin veneer to the surface of the cabinets and replacing the doors and hardware. If your cabinets are painted, add a fresh coat of paint and new hardware.

·                    Counter tops, sinks & faucets
Granite counters are not necessary. Simple laminates, newer faucets and sparkling sinks sell. Buyers don’t want leaky faucets or stained sinks.

Bathrooms

New floors, fixtures and lights payoff.

Roofs & Exterior

If your home needs a new roof, bite the bullet and do it. Even though most roofing tear-off jobs take one to two days, buyers shy away from buying a home if the roof needs to be replaced.

·                    Patch cement cracks in sidewalks

·                    Resurface asphalt driveways

·                    Plant flowers

·                    Caulk windows and doors

·                    Replace doorknobs and locks

·                    Fix or paint fences

Conclusion

Overall, buyers want to buy a home that has no deferred maintenance, newer appliances, updated plumbing, electrical and heating (including a/c), modern conveniences and is ready to occupy.

Call me at 818-266-2267 or check our website link below for further details or any information on our home inspection services.

 

Shawn Blaney,

President,

West Coast Home Inspections

http://www.westcoast-inspections.com/

Home inspection for the home buyer can make your dream home a worry-free reality. This is our mission statement at West Coast Home Inspections.

 

How to landscape your home to help protect against fire

Curb appeal, Home Improvement, Maintenance Topics, Uncategorized No Comments

The right kind of landscaping can help firefighters defend your property in the event of wildfire.

A good design can incorporate fire safety, drought tolerance and all the other benefits of landscaping, all in one package.  Here are some tips on this important subject:

Defensive Space: By reducing the amount of vegetation around your home, you make it easier for firefighters to protect your property - allow individual plants to remain in clumps that are separated from each other by at least 20 feet is recommended. Reduce flammable vegetation around the house. Cut back tree branches that hang over the roof. Keep shrubs and trees trimmed to remove low-hanging branches and deadwood. Cut down weeds.

Landscape Structures: Use non-flammable building materials like stone, brick, adobe and concrete. Avoid flammable wood structures in the garden. Wood decks hanging over unkempt vegetation are the most dangerous. Decks and other wood structures must be built to resist fire in high fire hazard areas; check with your local building department. Cover decks with approved fire resistant skirting or use concrete or stone patios instead. Flammable wood fences can act as fuses in a fire; use chain link fences or masonry walls instead. Avoid using flammable mulches like bark or wood chips near the house; use gravel, crushed rock or decomposed granite instead.

Plantings: Some plants are more flammable than others. Conifers like pine, cypress, cedar and juniper are the worst choices. Other very flammable plants include bougainvillea, pampas grass, eucalyptus, New Zealand flax, chamise and many grasses. Any plant will burn, but plants with lots of water stored in their leaves, or which contain large quantities of salts, are more resistant to fire. Examples are succulents, oleander, myoporum, lawns and many low-growing groundcovers.

Zone System: The way plants are arranged in the landscape is more important than the kind of plants you use. The Zone System uses four bands of plantings to slow an approaching fire and create defensible space.

  Zone 4, the outermost zone, consists of thinned native vegetation with free-standing clumps of pruned shrubs and low-growing plants or mulch in the remaining open space.

  Zone 3, closer to the house, is low plants to two feet tall that burn very quickly and offer very little fuel to the fire.

  Zone 2 is a greenbelt of succulents and very low-growing vegetation that is reluctant to burn.

  Zone 1 consists of less flammable species that present a minimal risk of exploding into flames during a wildfire.

For more information on planning a safe landscape design, contact your local fire prevention agency or ask the advice of professional landscapers in your area.

Call me at 818-266-2267 or check our website link below for further details or any information on our home inspection  services.

 

Shawn Blaney,

President,

West Coast Home Inspections

http://www.westcoast-inspections.com/

 

Home inspection for the home buyer can make your dream home a worry-free reality. This is our mission statement at West Coast Home Inspections.

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Home sellers tips

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Selling your home and not sure what steps you should take to present it to potential buyers? Here are some suggestions:

 

 

1.       Make Obvious Minor Repairs.

·       Replace cracked tiles on floor or counter.

·       Patch holes in walls.

·       Fix leaky faucets.

·       Fix doors that don’t close properly and kitchen drawers that jam.

·       Consider painting your walls neutral colors, especially if you have grown accustomed to exotically colored walls.
(Don’t give buyers any reason to remember your home as “the house with the pink bathroom.”)

·       Replace burned-out light bulbs.

·       If you’ve considered replacing a worn bedspread, do so now!

 

2.       Clean House.

·       Wash windows both inside and out.

·       Rent a pressure washer and spray down exterior of the home.

·       Clean out cobwebs.

·       Re-caulk tubs, showers and sinks.

·       Polish chrome faucets and mirrors.

·       Clean out the refrigerator.

·       Vacuum daily.

·       Wax floors.

·       Dust furniture, ceiling fan blades and light fixtures.

·       Replace worn rugs.

·       Clean and air out any musty smelling areas.

 

Call me at 818-266-2267 or check our website link below for further details or any information on our home inspection  services.

 

Shawn Blaney,

President,

West Coast Home Inspections

http://www.westcoast-inspections.com/

 

Home inspection for the home buyer can make your dream home a worry-free reality. This is our mission statement at West Coast Home Inspections.

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Home Selling Advice to Help You Attract Potential Buyers

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A large percentage of home buyers decide whether or not to look inside a house or take it seriously based on its curb appeal—the view they see when they drive by or arrive for a showing. You can help make sure they want to come inside your house by spending some time working on its exterior appearance.

It’s difficult to look at our own house in the same way that potential home buyers do, because when we become accustomed to the way something looks and functions, we can’t see its faults. Decide right now to stop thinking of the property as a home. It’s a house—a commodity you want to sell for the highest dollar possible.

Curb Appeal Exercise

Take a good look at the view of the house and its surroundings from across the street or far enough down the driveway.

What is your first impression of the house and yard area?

What are the best exterior features of the house or lot? How can you enhance them?

What are the worst exterior features of the house or lot? How can you minimize or improve them?

Park where a potential buyer would and walk towards the house, looking around you as if it were your first visit. Is the approach clean and tidy? What could you do to make it more attractive?

Take photos of the home’s exterior. If you have a digital camera, view the color versions first, then remove the color and look at it in black and white, because it’s easier to see problems when color isn’t around to affect our senses.

Make a list of the problem areas you discovered. Tackle clean up and repair chores first, then put some time into projects that make the grounds more attractive.

Kill mold and mildew on the house, sidewalks, roof, or driveway.

Stow away unnecessary garden implements and tools.

Clean windows and gutters.

Pressure wash dirty siding and dingy decks.

Edge sidewalks and remove vegetation growing between concrete or bricks.

Mow the lawn. Get rid of weeds.

Rake and dispose of leaves, even if your lot is wooded.

Trim tree limbs that are near or touching the home’s roof.

Don’t Forget the Rear View

Buyers doing a drive by will try their best to see your back yard. If it’s visible from another street or from someone’s driveway, include it in your curb appeal efforts.

Evening Curb Appeal

Do your curb appeal exercise again at dusk, because it isn’t unusual for potential buyers to drive by houses in the evening.

One quick way to improve evening curb appeal is with lighting:

String low voltage lighting along your driveway, sidewalks, and near important landscaping elements.

Add a decorative street lamp or an attractive light fixture to a front porch.

Make sure lighting that’s visible through front doors and windows enhances the home’s appearance.

Landscaping Decisions

There are times that adding elements to your landscaping can improve curb appeal, but there are other times when removing something is even more effective.  Are there any plants that would obscure attractive facets of your home?  If so, consider trimming or even removing them to increase your home’s appeal to prospective buyers.

Most buyers cannot visualize changes, and often won’t take a second look at a house if the first look doesn’t appeal to them. Home buyers who can visualize changes, and are prepared to make them, expect you to reduce the price of the house to compensate for the work they plan to do.

A Few Curb Appeal Tips

If you can budget it, a fresh paint job does wonders for a dingy house. Drive around your town to find color schemes that are appealing.

Install a more attractive front door, maybe something with leaded glass inserts.

If you can’t justify the cost of a new door, consider replacing plain doorknob hardware with something more attractive.

If new hardware is beyond your budget, repaint or stain the door and polish the hardware.

If you brainstorm, you’ll find that there’s a solution to most problems—one that lets you stay within your budget. The trick is to find the areas where improvements are needed, then work on them as best you can.

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Quick and inexpensive home improvement tips

Curb appeal, Helpful tips, Home Improvement, Lighting Topics, Maintenance Topics, Paint topics 1 Comment

As a home inspector I often share tips and information with home owners.  I ran across an article recently that listed some of the top home improvements that could be done for less than five hundred dollars.

1. Wall paper just one wall in a room - this alone can change the appearance of a room dramatically and yet still be affordable. 

2. Kitchen roll outs - take out the out dated shelves and add kitchen roll outs.  This is one of the most satisfying upgrades you can do.  It brings everything that was tucked away into sight.  They say this only takes 15 minutes per rollout, let me know your opinion.

3. Track lighting is another addition to your home.  Track lighting lets you put the lighting exactly where you want it.

4. Closet organizers - the name of this one says it all.  Wire shelving is inexpensive and easy to install.  Organization is the key to happiness. 

5. Add curb appeal - transform your front entrance with small accents and minor changes in addition to stowing away unnecessary garden implements and tools and cleaning up the house exterior.   When you’re trying to sell your home one of the best things to check is your curb appeal to attract potential homebuyers.

There you go - five top home improvements that you can do without a lot of hassle and it won’t cost a fortune to do it!

Call me at 818-266-2267 or check our website link below for further details.

 

Shawn Blaney,

President,

West Coast Home Inspections

http://www.westcoast-inspections.com/

 

 

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