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Updated 11 days ago, 11/13/2024

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Jonathan Greene
Professional Services
Pro Member
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Mendham, NJ
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The Most Important Parts of the House to See as an Out-of-State Investor

Jonathan Greene
Professional Services
Pro Member
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Mendham, NJ
ModeratorPosted

If you are a new out-of-state investor or thinking about investing out-of-state, you need to see some parts of the house before making an offer. This means you need boots on the ground. Zillow or your agent's MLS portal will never have all of the photos you need to make a fully informed offer. Those sites have the best marketing photos, but that's not where the potential costs are. Here is a list of many things you need photos of that won't be available online:

1. The entire basement, if there is one. Each corner and where the floors meet the wall. A video is best for this. It would also be best to have someone go inside every closet and door. Also, yes to a crawlspace, but this is a big ask of a friend to do it. You are looking for evidence of water and mold and assessing the structural integrity of the walls and support beams.

2. All of the mechanicals, including permit dates and any identifiers. Hot water heater, furnace, gas, electrical box, HVAC, oil tank, plumbing pipes. You just want an overview of the age of the units and upkeep. Remember, just a new furnace could cost $10k.

3. The attic. This is where you find issues with the roof, not on the outside. The leaks are visible from the inside of the roofline inside the attic, if there is one. You will also find pest issues in the attic.

4. The entire exterior. This is best with a video as well. You are looking for issues with the foundation and any other exterior anomalies like giant trees that could be in the sewer line or pressing against the foundation of the house, evidence of buried tanks, where the septic and leach field is, etc.

There are plenty more things to focus on as well, but these four are often neglected by newer out-of-state investors relying on an agent or friend as their boots.

What else did I miss?

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