Buying A Home
Dear Community,
Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.
If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.
Thank you.
Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.
one of the houses we're interested in is a flip. is there anything we should be wary of in flips? it seems very common around here to buy a foreclosed house for cheap at auction, do a few cosmetic things, then turn around and put it back on the market for 20-40% more. obviously we'd still be getting an inspection.
tia

Have you seen my monkey?
Re: buying a flipped house?
IUI #1 10/12/11 (Bravelle + HCG + Prometrium & acupuncture) = 10/26 BFP! Beta #1=250, Beta #2= 615. 1st u/s 11/8.
We've purchased and rehabbed two foreclosures (the second one is still in progress). The people we hire to do work on it tend to ask if it's a flip or a long term home b/c it impacts the materials they recommend using, even down to whether they recommend the more expensive exterior paint or the cheap stuff. Someone flipping a house has an incentive to get stuff done as cheaply as possible and to make the house look attractive, they don't really have a motivation to spend extra. I doubt I'd buy a flip.
My Chart My Nest Bio
Just beware as others have warned and get a fantastic home inspection.
I saw an HGTV special when they went back to home purchasers and asked how things had been since buying the home. One couple who bought a flipped home said it was a nightmare. Shoddy work and materials made for expensive improvements.
One example - the lovely moldings around doors turned out to be some sort of cardboard composite, that bubbled when it was painted.
I recommend getting two inspections; the usual one and a city code one. We bought a flipped house in 2008 and it was a nightmare. I don't know how it passed the inspection because about six weeks after we moved in, we found out that most of the electrical and plumbing had to be redone and nothing was up to code. The shortcuts they took were mindblowing. (Ex. our jetted bathtub was plugged in with an extension cord, many outlets were not grounded, the master closet shelving was not put into a stud and the entire thing came crashing down one morning, and my favorite, they left a tree branch stuck in the main plumbing pipe and when we tried to do laundry in the mudroom, the entire kitchen sink filled up with water.)
The seller's agent and our agent ended up splitting the bill for the repairs and I believe it came to close to $10K.
I doubt we would ever buy a flip again, but if we did, I would definitely pay extra for additional inspections AND get the public record on permits obtained for the work (we found out that they never applied for nor obtained any permits to do the plumbing, electrical, or add-on that they did and therefore did not have code inspections.)
Good luck!
We bought a flip, but it was a 110 year old house - so there was not much they could do poorly to the basic systems that wouldn't be obvious.
We knew all the issues before we bought and were prepared.
I don't think I'd ever buy another flipped house. After a 10K bathroom repair where we found ungrounded wires, live wires left open in the insulation, and lots of shortcuts (like crappy tiling jobs) and shoddy workmanship. All this wasn't apparent to our inspector. But we did have the sewer scoped and that turned out to be a major problem, which the sellers fixed.
Everything was half-assed. I'd get at least two inspections in the future for anything resembling a fipped house and spend more money on any extra inspections (sewer, plumbing, electrical, etc). UGH. I get angry just thinking about it. Lesson learned--we were first time homebuyers and needed to buy fast.