Can I negotiate the price based on inspection
results?
Can I force a price cut after a home inspection? Yes — but only if you do it right.
Why inspection results give you leverage
A home inspection is not just a checklist. It’s proof. The inspector documents defects, safety risks, and deferred maintenance. Those findings become bargaining chips. Sellers expect small issues. They don’t expect a clear, documented case for price reduction backed by estimates and legal contingencies.
What you can ask for (and what’s realistic)
- Price reduction: direct drop in the sale price based on repair estimates.
- Repair credit at closing: seller leaves money in escrow for you to fix issues after closing.
- Seller-performed repairs: seller fixes problems before closing with licensed contractors.
- Walk-away option: if you have an inspection contingency, you can cancel if the deal is unacceptable.
Realistic outcomes depend on defect severity. Major safety or structural issues buy you leverage. Cosmetic items usually don’t.
How to negotiate the price step-by-step
- Read the inspection report carefully. Highlight major defects, safety risks, and items that affect habitability.
- Get written repair estimates from licensed contractors for the major issues. One reliable estimate holds more weight than vague complaints.
- Calculate options: full price reduction vs. repair credit vs. seller repairs. Show numbers — sellers respond to math.
- Present a clear, professional request to the seller (through your agent): include the inspection report, contractor estimates, and your precise request (amount or scope).
- Be firm but flexible: ask for price reduction first, accept a repair credit if the seller resists.
- Use your contingency deadline. If the seller stalls, exercise the right to renegotiate or walk away.

How much reduction should you request?
Base it on documented costs. For safety or structural fixes, request the full repair cost plus a small buffer (5–10%) for surprises. For cosmetic or minor items, ask for a 10–30% allocation of the estimated cost or a smaller credit. Never guess — use contractor quotes.
Common seller responses and how to handle them
- Seller refuses: ask for a repair credit or split costs.
- Seller offers partial fixes: get written confirmation on scope and timeline.
- Seller counters with price reduction smaller than requested: counter with documented reasons and keep negotiation short.
Legal and timing tips
- Always keep the inspection contingency timeline in mind. Missing deadlines weakens your ability to renegotiate.
- Use licensed contractor estimates and written bids. Verbal quotes don’t convince closing attorneys or lenders.
- Know local market conditions. In a buyer’s market, buyers have more leverage; in a seller’s market, be prepared to prioritize only major issues.
Bottom line
Yes, you can negotiate the price based on inspection results — but you need evidence, contractor estimates, clear numbers, and use of your contingency. Do it professionally and quickly.
Tony Sousa is the local real estate expert who helps buyers use inspection findings to win fair deals. Contact Tony: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















