11/15/2025
A pre-listing inspection and addressing those repairs before listing your home for sale will go a long way when it comes to setting the stage to attract buyers. Buyers find fewer “problems” and feel good about how well you maintained the home, so they won’t feel the need to haggle for additional concessions upfront or later in the transaction. Highly recommend!
Here's how most home sales go:
Week 1: List the house
Week 2: Accept an offer, celebrate
Week 3: Buyer's inspection finds 47 "issues"
Week 4: Buyer demands $15k in repairs or credits
Week 5: Negotiate down to $8k
Week 6: Everyone's exhausted and resentful
Your "win" feels like a loss.
Here's how it goes with a pre-listing inspection:
Before listing: Pay $500 for inspection
Find issues: HVAC needs $800 repair, roof has minor issue $1,200
Fix them: Spend $2,000, keep all receipts
List the house: "Recent repairs: HVAC serviced, roof repaired, receipts available"
Buyer's inspection: Finds nothing major (you already fixed it)
Negotiation: "We addressed everything pre-sale, here are the receipts"
Close: Clean, fast, no drama
You spent $2,000 and saved $8,000 in negotiations.
And you controlled the entire process.
Why this works:
1. You fix it on YOUR terms
Your contractor, your price, your timeline
Not the buyer's $15k "guy who can do it all"
2. Receipts = leverage
"We already fixed that, here's proof"
3. Buyer confidence soars
"Seller addressed issues proactively"
"This house was maintained, not neglected"
Inspection becomes a formality, not a negotiation
4. Faster close
No repair negotiations delaying everything
Fewer contingencies Less stress
The math the traditional way:
Buyer's inspection: $500 (they pay)
Buyer demands: $15k in repairs/credits
You negotiate down: $8k
You pay: $8,000
Pre-listing inspection way:
Your inspection: $500
Fix actual issues: $2,000
Buyer demands: $0 (already fixed)
You pay: $2,500
Savings: $5,500
Plus: Faster close, less stress, stronger negotiating position.
What agents know:
The inspection is where deals die.
Not because houses are bad.
Because sellers don't know what's wrong until it's too late to control the narrative.
Buyer's inspector finds issue = You're on defense
You find and fix issue = You're on offense
Defense costs more. Always.
"But what if the inspection finds nothing?"
Then you spent $500 for peace of mind and a clean report to show buyers.
That report = marketing gold.
"Pre-inspected, no major issues" is a selling point worth thousands in buyer confidence.