Standing Out in Ohio Podcast

Buying A House? Demand Proof That Fixes Are Real

Jim Troth

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 13:00

Send a text

The repair was “done,” but the furnace cabinet was open and a part sat on the door. That moment kicked off a blunt breakdown of how buyers can protect themselves from empty promises, fake receipts, and cosmetic fixes that fail the first cold snap. We share real stories from the field—vents “extended” with gutter downspout, window trim rebuilt with silicone, and invoices from contractors who don’t exist—and turn them into a simple, repeatable playbook for getting repairs you can trust.

We start with readiness and scope: why utilities must be on, access guaranteed, and the repair list written with clear materials and standards. Then we focus on control—why you should choose the contractor, how to verify licenses on state sites, and what real documentation looks like, from itemized invoices to serial-number photos. For bigger risks like electrical, plumbing, HVAC, roofing, and sewer lines, we explain when to require permits and how to use specialist testing such as sewer scoping to avoid expensive surprises after move-in.

If a seller insists on coordinating work, we explain the escrow approach: set a fair amount based on your bids, hold funds through closing, and hire your pro afterward so quality comes first. We also cover when a re-inspection is worth the fee, how to make that visit efficient, and why inspectors and appraisers are the only parties without a financial stake in the deal closing—meaning they’re the ones you want telling you the hard truths. Looking for a smarter path to closing day? Press play, take notes, and use this checklist to keep your home, your money, and your sanity intact. If you find value, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a quick review to help others buy with confidence.

Support the show

To learn more about Habitation Investigation, the Three-time Winner of the Best Home Inspection Company in the Midwest Plus the Winner of Consumer Choice Award for Columbus Ohio visit Home Inspection Columbus Ohio - Habitation Investigation (homeinspectionsinohio.com)

NBC4 news segments: The importance of home inspections, and what to look for | NBC4 WCMH-TV

Advice from experts: Don’t skip the home inspection | NBC4 WCMH-TV

OSU student’s mysterious symptoms end up tied to apartment’s air quality | NBC4 WCMH-TV

How to save money by winterizing your home | NBC4 WCMH-TV


Continuing Education for Ohio Agents Scheduled classes
Continuing Education for Ohio Agents Course lis...

Return Visit Frustrations

SPEAKER_01

Alright. I'm a little frustrated today.

SPEAKER_03

What's that, honey?

SPEAKER_01

Alright, we did an inspection. And one of our inspectors did the inspection. The gas was off of the place. So of course, then the agent wants us to go back out to finish the inspection. Which makes sense. I'm sorry, we finished the inspection. It's not our house. The f house wasn't ready. So anyway, so we go back. I go up back out there because they have a they now have batteries in the thermostat.

SPEAKER_03

Oh, they did have batteries? That was so nice of them.

SPEAKER_01

And the gas is actually on now. I'm assuming something was not right because you're frustrated. Well I get there. First I go I go to the thermostat. Thermostat says it's 50 degrees in here. I turn on, I turn up the temp, check the temperature. Nope, it's set at 70.

SPEAKER_03

You're like, okay, that's a problem.

Furnace Apart And No Notice

SPEAKER_01

This is not working. So I go downstairs to the basement, and there's the furnace. Cabinet door is completely open, and a part for the furnace is just sitting on the cabinet door. Oh, that's not laying on the floor. So at some point they're getting it worked on, getting it fixed, but they totally ignore to tell us that it's not ready. Do not come out.

SPEAKER_03

To do the inspection, don't come out.

How Do You Verify Repairs

Snow And Plumbing Vent Mistakes

SPEAKER_01

So, which now I did I was able to do the water here. Yes, water here is working. But why why would we not come out when it's all done? Yeah, so my question is like, all right, say you bought a house and you had a request or remedy, which is awesome. You have to. So after you have this back, you got the request remedy, you you want, hey, I want you guys that get this fixed. This wasn't working right, or there's there's a little issue with it, and they can fix it. How do you know it was done correctly? Because how many times have we gone back out to do checks and it wasn't fixed right? Nine out of ten. It's most of the time, yes. And then I remember one house, all right, your plumbing vent. It's supposed to stick out out of the roof, and what the plumbing vent does is help your sewer line and your drain lines just run smoothly, and those sewer gases can escape out the top and everything can drain quickly because you don't have a pressure, pressure buildup or negative pressure. Everything event. Well, those things here in Ohio, those things are supposed to stick up about six inches above the roof if they go to the roof. That way you don't have snow blocking them. Makes sense to me. Perfect sense, yes. So the request I know they had was hey, we we need this extended so it doesn't get doesn't get blocked. Oh god, this is gonna be bad. I get there, and what the homeowner did, the seller, to extend, he took just a piece of gutter downspout and just sat over top of it. It's not even secured, not even the right material. I mean, it would work a little bit, but it's not even secured. It's just pure laziness when you could have gotten another small piece of pipe, maybe do a Fernco connection to it, do a hose clamp, hose clamp it on, it'd be done. Too lazy. He wouldn't have got a gutter piece and laid it up on there.

SPEAKER_02

That's just pathetic. Like genuinely, that's just pathetic.

SPEAKER_01

And then we have had I think it was an electrician who's supposed to do some. We had electrical issues, there's a lot of electrical issues at houses, especially older houses. Not uncommon. It's all repairable. We got a receipt sent to us showing that it was fixed. You looked that receipt up.

SPEAKER_03

Something wasn't right about that whole scenario to me, and they had a license on it.

SPEAKER_01

Was this the one that's written on like just yellow notebook, notepad paper?

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, it was something. There's something, it's been a couple years.

SPEAKER_01

Very non-professional.

Fake Receipts And Licenses

SPEAKER_03

I I'm like, something's just not right. So I pull up that license number that didn't exist in the state, pull up the name that was on it, they're not licensed. So it was a completely fake receipt. And that's not the first time we've had that happen where we've gotten fake receipts.

SPEAKER_01

So the question is, then how do you really know if you have a request for memory, how do you know the work is actually being done right? How do you know that that it's just well I know the the first example gave you, I know it's just some homeowner just half-assing it. I'll I'll slip a downs, just slap a down spout over top of the pipe. Call it good and call it good.

SPEAKER_03

You don't really.

SPEAKER_01

Or I've seen I've seen homeowner repairs where the window trim outside the house rotted. The whole and I look at it. Well, here's what I did. I look at it, I'm looking at the doing that's right, it's like really, it's different. Something's not right. My spidey sense is going off. It's not right. Something's odd, something's off over here. I go in and touch it. That whole like bottom four inches of the of the windowsill, like trim, solid caulking.

SPEAKER_00

Habitation investigation is the way to go for a home inspection in Ohio. Trusted licensed home inspectors for your needs. From radon to mall to warranty. For a great home inspection, you really can't go. Visit home inspections in Ohio.com.

SPEAKER_01

So like you couldn't even use wood putty. You couldn't even, yeah. You couldn't even dig out all the rotten spot, shove some wood putty in there. That would have at least been a better idea. Give it a day to harden then paint it. You couldn't do it, you had to go just go get some bunch of big tubes of silicone caulk and just squirt it in there, and then it's all wavy and spongy. Probably still got a leak back there.

SPEAKER_03

That's gonna work well.

SPEAKER_01

So, how do you know?

SPEAKER_03

You don't. The only way that you know would be to have somebody come back out and look at everything.

SPEAKER_01

See, and and home inspectors typically don't want to go back out.

Caulk Disasters And Shoddy Fixes

SPEAKER_03

No, because well, and like how many times have we gone back out and literally stuff wasn't done right? Or we were told that the gas was on, or that this was on, or that was on, and that this was fixed, and most of it's not.

SPEAKER_01

Well, it's a waste of inspector's time. Because for us, we're not gonna lose give up a time slot that could be done for a whole house inspection and termine and a radon test. We're gonna we're not gonna give up that whole time slot to come take a look at something that really should only take us less than an hour to check your your list is fixed. And we and we need to get paid for this time as well. Right. I mean, typically we will go out to a house once to take a look at it.

SPEAKER_03

And then that next time is a fee.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I mean, I'm thinking we almost need to just always charge a fee. What because the seller knows we're coming out. The seller knows they shouldn't get their house ready.

SPEAKER_03

Well, I don't think the client should have to pay for that. And we've had this discussion before. I I think it should be the seller. If you don't have your house ready to go and we have to come back out for any reason, there is a return trip fee.

Fees For Rechecks And Readiness

SPEAKER_01

Especially if it if we're gonna have the electricity's off, gas is off, you know things are not repaired yet, but you know you need to have these things ready for the inspection.

SPEAKER_03

Right.

SPEAKER_01

You know. It's not like hey, we go to the house, we discover there's you have a leak in your attic space, which you I I legit sellers would probably would not know if they didn't go in their attic. I wouldn't, I wouldn't expect them to know that. But 100% they should know they can easily tell, like, hey, I have no batteries in my thermostat. I got the cover off my my my furnace. I know it's not working. I haven't had gas or electricity on this place for two months.

SPEAKER_03

Plumbing hasn't been used in two years. There wasn't a little old grandma, there just wasn't anybody living here. So yeah, go ahead and test that out too.

Pick Your Contractors Or Use Escrow

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, so you how you know it was done correctly. So what you need to do, if you have your request remedy, request that your contractors that you know go out and do the work.

SPEAKER_03

That would be the best way to do it.

SPEAKER_01

Do not do not go, yeah, yeah, I'll let the seller pick the person to fix it, or the seller says he's pretty handy, he'll do it.

SPEAKER_03

Because the seller did such a great job with all of the stuff before that we found during the inspection.

SPEAKER_01

Correct, correct. No, I have had, I'll be honest, I'll do this. I was at a home inspection, um, testing some outlets, GFCI outlet did not did not work. Okay. Seller was there. He was an electrician because I saw all the tools. I go, hey, just you know, you got one GFC that's not tripping. He goes, like, oh, you you is okay if I change it? Yeah, go and change it. Let me know what's done, I'll come back and retest it. No problem. It works fine. He's an electric yeah, he's an electrician. He knows all the evidence was that he is an electrician and he and it was working correctly. He's done. So that's cool. I have no problem with that. But most homeowners are not electricians, plumbers, it and they would take care of their house if they if they well, ideally, they would take care of their own house. Yeah, but you know how the cobbler, the cobbler's children have no shoes, right? So, yeah, how do you know? I mean, you could hire the home inspector to go back out, and and the home inspector should charge you for that because their time is is valuable.

SPEAKER_02

Right.

SPEAKER_01

They're protecting you, yeah. But the best thing really is to get receipts from a contractor that you pick. So we have seen fake receipts. Yes, fake license numbers, fake companies, fake everything.

SPEAKER_03

I I think it's a better idea if you pick the people that do the repairs. Now, obviously, don't have your people gouge the seller because that's not going to work. Have it be a fair market value for their services, or have them put it into escrow as part of the contract negotiations, and then you go ahead and you get whatever fixed off of the escrow money and the seller gets whatever's left over. I mean, there's there's a couple ways to do it, but yeah, you you some of this stuff we've seen is amazing.

Incentives, Skin In The Game, And Risk

SPEAKER_01

I mean, so ideally you can totally trust people, but you can't. No, you can't. You can't. I mean, some you gotta have a good relationship with somebody to to trust them. But yeah, this is I mean, it's real estate, there's money involved.

SPEAKER_03

Anytime there's money, that's one of the motivators.

SPEAKER_01

Some people do not get paid unless unless the house closes, so you're more of a factor to take into consideration is whether or not they're gonna care if things are done correctly.

SPEAKER_03

Well, and in this whole real estate transaction, literally the only people involved in the real estate transaction that it doesn't matter to are the home inspectors and the appraisers. They have no skin in the game as to whether or not that house sells. They go out, they do their appraisal, call it good. We go, we do our inspection, and that's it. It is what it is for for both of those types of companies.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that's true.

SPEAKER_03

Beyond that, everybody else involved in that transaction stands to make money from it.

Final Advice And Sign Off

SPEAKER_01

And and the inspection company makes money as long as they do an inspection and they do it extremely accurate for the client. Because the client could come after the inspector if they screw things up. Now, here in Ohio, that is limited to the price of the home inspection, but still they want to make they they need they want to make that money and they want to keep it. And the way to keep it is do a thorough job and honest. Right. Where the where the other professions, I'm not saying people are dishonest, but they they have no skin in the game if if uh if if they're they're wrong on a couple of things, or the house has issues. If that if the person moves in the house, has a bad sewer line, doesn't affect their agent any. They already got their appraiser, Annie. It doesn't affect them, doesn't affect the loan officer any. Bank don't care. You still owe you still owe it.

SPEAKER_03

So you still owe that mortgage.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. So when you have a home inspection, first of all, you must have a home inspection done, and then you really, really should have the sewer line checked. Always get that scope. Yes. So I think I I think I was just on this one, but trust the home inspector. But I'd be honest, we do not want to go out and do rechecks again. No, I know. It's not worth the time.

SPEAKER_03

No, it's not, and then we've been lied to so many times.

SPEAKER_01

I've had agents get mad at us because the things weren't done, weren't fixed, right?

SPEAKER_03

I'm like, don't it's not our job. We didn't fix it in the first place. Right.

SPEAKER_01

I'm just I'm just telling you, we're reporting what it is. I didn't, I'm not killing the deal. The house is committing suicide. We're just reporting how badly the the seller took care of the place, right? That's the facts. All right, thank you, everybody. Bye guys, bye bye.