Originally posted by Broker-In-NJ:
If you want to check out things the inspector may not go ahead but don't take anything apart. Keep out of the inspectors way: who told you that. I expect my buyer to be right there with the inspector asking questions when they come to mind (even, can I change this wall kind of questions). Good inspectors are find with this. Not only is my buyer there I am there following the inspector around. If I see something I think the buyer might not understand I'll ask the inspector to explain it. The inspection is the opportunity for the buyer to 1) learn about the house for future maintenance and 2) learn its current condition.
By the way on a single home 2 story 3BR 2.5 baths and garage and basement..you should be there 3 to 4 hours. Maybe a little less it the house is relatively new or more if it is a fixer upper.
Do keep in mind, though, that the inspector is there to, first and foremost, document the condition of the property. Too many interruptions and questions could cause him to lose his focus, possibly missing something or misstating something.
Although I'm fine with most interruptions and questions, even I can get frustrated when there are too many questions. If it gets to that point, I'll ask my Clients to write their questions on a piece of paper and save them until the end. That allows me to focus intensely on the job I am doing for them. Once I've documented the condition of the property, then they are free to ask as many questions as they want, ask for a tour of the property or to see items I have talked about, ask for helpful advice on removing walls, landscaping, renovating, whatever.
Also, it might not be necessary to be there for 3-4 hours, give or take. One should really say that the inspection will take 3-4 "work hours," similar to how we used to use the terms "man hours" and "person hours" many decades ago. I think about 25% of home inspection companies are multi-inspector firms, so having two inspectors document the condition of a property would only require one to be there for 1½-2 "time hours" that still encompassed 3-4 "work hours." I once took 7 inspectors to a 15,000-SF property, and we finished in 2 hours and 45 minutes. However, that was still 19¼ "work hours," but can you imagine an actual inspection taking 19¼ hours. That would require 2-3 days and really tick off many Realtors while possibly also boring the buyers to death.
I've found that it takes one of my inspectors about 1¼ hours for every 1,000 SF, on average. New homes take about 1 hours, scrapers take about 2 hours. That also depends on what type of inspection my Clients have ordered since I'm one of the few inspections nationwide who offer different
Inspection types to meet different Client needs under different circumstances. I actully have 12 different property inspection types, but I'll encourage property investors who are going to "gut and renovate" to order my BASIC inspection, while my STANDARD inspection is good for all properties.