mighty58 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 01, 2020 12:42 am
Anything else I should remember to check during the final house survey? Squeaky doors, windows, etc.?
Definitely go through the house as if you were an detail-obsessed Japanese shopper, and make notes of everything you want taken care of prior to purchase. The last thing they want is for you to pull out at this stage, so they should be accommodating.
Just wanted to give examples of what my wife has asked the builders to fix (for free) over the past year since we've moved in the house:
- replacements of practically all (indoor) doors because they got slightly bent after our first 2 months due to humidity
- replacement of a plank of wood on the floor that had been damaged before we moved in. This required to unmount an entire built-in closet since it was on top of the damaged plank
- the sewage pipes were too close to "horizontal" which meant we had some issues with the flow. They did what they could to have it inclined a bit more.
- minor stuff such as some of the wallpaper, paint here and there, etc...
- a light switch they had literally forgotten to install (a tiny hole in the wall was visible where it should have been installed, and it was clearly on the house blueprints)
Edit: people have told me attention to detail is key here. Some windows might be single pane even though the whole house is advertised as "double" or "triple" pane. Some doors attachments might be missing screws. Some details might be the lower-end version of something that was advertised as high end (e.g. door with some plastic wood-like texture when the brochure says all doors are made of wood, cheap closet when the brochure says its the high-end model that closes without making any noise, wrong color for this or that closet, etc...). Not sure if this is done by mistake or by malice, but those are real life examples that happened to us or some friends.
Edit 2: some of the checks we made when moving in include those things I'm mentioning above, as well as testing that all lights/switches turn on correctly, and that all electricity plugs are actually working (by plugging your phone into each one of them to see if it charges, for example), opening/closing all windows and doors.