Can an inspection kill a deal?
Can a home inspection torpedo your sale? Here’s the brutal truth buyers and sellers avoid.
Quick answer
Yes. A home inspection — or a low appraisal — can kill a deal. Not always, but often enough to plan for it. If a buyer uses an inspection contingency, finds major defects, and the parties can’t agree on repairs or price, the buyer can walk. If the appraisal comes in below the contract price, the lender may refuse the mortgage and the sale can collapse.
Why inspections kill deals
- Major safety or structural issues: foundation, mold, electrical hazards. These are deal-stoppers for lenders and buyers.
- Surprises the buyer can’t afford: too many repairs, or a repair cost that exceeds the buyer’s budget.
- Inspection contingency: most contracts let buyers back out if the inspection is unsatisfactory.
- Emotional reaction: a buyer who loses confidence will walk even over fixable items.
Inspections expose risk. Buyers buy peace of mind. If you can’t provide it, you lose trust — and the deal.

Appraisals: a separate threat
Appraisals affect financing. If the appraisal is lower than the agreed price, the bank will only lend based on that lower value. That creates a funding gap. Options to fix a low appraisal are limited: renegotiate price, buyer adds cash, seller reduces price, or get a second appraisal. If none of those happen, the mortgage falls through and the deal dies.
Real-world options that save deals
You don’t have to lose the sale. Here’s how top agents handle it:
- Pre-listing inspection: Find and fix big issues before you list. Buyers see fewer surprises.
- Disclose everything: Full disclosure builds trust. It reduces buyer fear and limits legal exposure.
- Offer repair credits: Instead of doing all repairs, offer a credit so the buyer can handle them after closing.
- Price strategically: If systems are old, price for market reality. Buyers and appraisers are both watching comps.
- Negotiate smart: Split repair costs, provide contractor bids, or offer an escrow holdback.
- Challenge low appraisals: Supply recent comparables, municipal assessments, upgrades receipts. Request a review or second appraisal.
These are not guesses. They are tactics top agents use to close at full value more often.
How an experienced realtor helps
An experienced agent anticipates inspection and appraisal issues before they happen. They craft contract language, advise on disclosures, help prioritize repairs, and negotiate with buyers and lenders. That prevents deals from collapsing and protects sale price.
Tony Sousa is a Local Realtor with deep market knowledge and a record of keeping deals together in Toronto’s competitive market. If you want a plan that prevents inspections and appraisals from killing your sale, get concrete advice.
Contact Tony Sousa: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca
No fluff. Fix the risks before they fix your sale.



















