oldbilbo
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What do they do that you can't do for yourself, but more thoroughly? What do they get right and what do they tend to miss? Who feels it was money well spent....?
A good one is well worth it.
I broker yachts all day long, read 100's of reports and have sailed 1000's of miles fixing my own boat as I go.
But once a year I have a surveyor I trust check over my own boat to keep me up to speed with the things I can't see.
Avoid anyone who's opening gambit is I guarantee I can save you my fee.
You want a pragmatic, experienced guy (or girl) who keeps things in perspective and has an eye for detail.
You pay a surveyor to lay his head on the chopping block.
But how do I find such a person? Recommendation? (from whom?)
Also (sorry to hang these on but didn't want to start a new thread) is there a standard form of wording for an offer "subject to survey", or is it just an open negotiation if significant defects are found. Are there circumstabnnces where the vendor could claim breach of contract if you theought cost of putting defects right out of proportion to end value? And also, assume buyer has to pay for lift out?
What do they do that you can't do for yourself, but more thoroughly? What do they get right and what do they tend to miss? Who feels it was money well spent....?
in any case the reports are worded in such a way to let them off the hook if any problems show up.