Should I include home inspection conditions?
Skip the home inspection and save time — or risk a major repair bill? Which choice wins? Read this before you sign.
Quick Answer
Yes — include a home inspection condition in most offers. It protects buyers, creates leverage in negotiation, and keeps you out of costly surprises. Only waive it when you have a clear, deliberate strategy and understand the risks.
Why the home inspection condition matters
Offers without inspection conditions look stronger to sellers in hot markets. But strength can be illusionary. A buyer who waives inspection may win the bidding war and lose the house — but pay for unseen defects later. The inspection condition gives you two things every buyer needs: protection and options.
- Protection: You can back out or renegotiate if major issues appear.
- Options: You control repairs, credits, or cancellation, depending on the report.

When to include the condition (practical rules)
- First-time buyers or fixed budgets: Always include it. A mortgage is a number; a collapsed foundation is ruinous.
- Older homes or unknown maintenance history: Include it. Age and deferred maintenance increase risk.
- Competitive markets: Use a shorter inspection period (e.g., 5 business days) and a strong pre-approval to make your offer competitive while staying protected.
- New builds with warranty: You might limit inspection clauses to major defects and rely on builder warranty. Still inspect everything.
When you can consider waiving it
- You have a pre-offer inspection report.
- You’re experienced, a professional investor, and budget for worst-case repairs.
- The property is new and covered by a comprehensive warranty.
Waiving inspection should never be impulse. It’s a calculated trade-off: speed and appeal versus certainty and safety.
Negotiation leverage: how to use the inspection condition strategically
- Use a short conditional period: 3–7 business days keeps the offer attractive but gives time to assess.
- Limit scope for non-structural items if you trust the seller: e.g., allow only major defects to cancel the deal.
- Attach a clear remediation request template to your offer wording to accelerate negotiations if issues arise.
Practical checklist for buyers
- Include a clear deadline for the inspection contingency.
- Prebook a licensed inspector before submitting the offer.
- Budget 1–3% of purchase price for potential unexpected repairs.
- Get a written report and use it to request repairs, credits, or price adjustment.

Bottom line
Including a home inspection condition is the responsible, smarter move for most buyers. It reduces risk, preserves negotiating power, and prevents expensive surprises. Only waive it with full information and a plan.
For expert, local negotiation strategy, contact Tony Sousa — a top local realtor who negotiates tough offers and protects buyers. Email: tony@sousasells.ca | Phone: 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca
















