Can I negotiate the price based on inspection
results?
Can inspection results cut the price? Read this and win the negotiation.
Quick answer
Yes. Inspection results give you leverage to negotiate price, repairs, or credits. Use them strategically, not emotionally. Know the difference between cosmetic issues and major defects. Know the market. Know your walk-away point.
Why inspection results matter
A home inspection is a condition report. It lists safety issues, structural problems, and deferred maintenance. Sellers expect some fixes. When an inspection reveals costly or safety-related defects, you can demand action. That demand can be a price reduction, repair completion before closing, or a repair credit at closing.
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What gives you negotiating power
- Major safety or structural issues: roof leaks, foundation cracks, electrical hazards, mold. These justify price reduction.
- Costly repairs over typical thresholds (use local averages).
- Items the seller misrepresented in listing or disclosures.
- Short inspection contingency windows limit ability to negotiate—avoid them.

Tactical steps to negotiate price after inspection
- Hire a licensed inspector and get a clear report: photos, costs, and priority levels.
- Get contractor estimates for major items. Numbers beat opinions.
- Prioritize fixes: safety/structural first, then systems, then cosmetics.
- Choose your remedy: ask for repair, ask for credit, or ask for price reduction. Credits are clean and tax-neutral.
- Present a concise amendment: list defects, attach estimates, propose exact dollar reduction or credit. Use deadline (48–72 hours).
- Be ready to compromise: split costs, accept seller repairs with licensed proof, or agree to a credit.
- If seller refuses, evaluate walking away if inspection contingency protects you. Don’t overpay for risk.
Example: Inspection finds a $12,000 roof repair and $3,000 electrical fixes. You can request $15,000 credit or insist seller completes certified repairs before closing. Back it with two contractor quotes.
Negotiation language that works
- “Inspection revealed X requiring $Y in repairs. We request a $Y credit at closing or verified repairs prior to closing.”
- Keep tone factual. Avoid emotional language. Numbers and written estimates close deals.
Common seller responses and how to handle them
- Seller agrees: great — get written amendment.
- Seller offers split: evaluate if final price reflects risk saved.
- Seller refuses: use contingency to walk away or re-negotiate terms (shorter closing, different credits). Know local market pressure — if buyers are scarce, seller is likelier to negotiate.
Final word
Negotiating after inspection is standard. Do it with data, clear requests, and deadlines. That’s how you convert inspection results into real savings.
Tony Sousa is a local real estate expert in home inspection and condition negotiations. For a clear plan on your next purchase or sale, email tony@sousasells.ca or call 416-477-2620. Visit https://www.sousasells.ca for more resources.
Contact and disclaimer: This post offers general guidance and not legal advice. For contract specifics, consult your agent or lawyer.


















