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Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems. |
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![]() The latest house I bought (the one I'm living in), I demanded a warranty as part of the selling terms. The seller agreed...and it cost him $120. He obviously felt it was a reasonable cost to close the deal. In my area, few homes are sold without a warranty. I don't know if this is a national trend or not. As an aside... I can't image ANYONE going to a closing without an attorney...especially if its a new house. If yer spending $250,000+ on a purchase, how much will an extra $100 or so...for insurance...set you back? If it gives you a warm fuzzy feeling then great, but how much protection do you think you are getting for $50 (there is at least a 50% margin for commissions and profit)? You couldn't be getting much protection--as I recall the warranty I refused to provide was ~$500. And even at that price they are worthless. These warranties are filled with weasel words and exclusions and they get to choose what kind of fix is implemented. They are just an extra profit generator that takes advantage of new home buyers and the loss of clear thinking that seems to affect people when making major purchases. A case in point--my supervisor had a dream house custom built and the contractor left the insulation out from below the windows in several places which caused the windows to fog up in the winter time. He complained numerous times about the problem and all he got was some guy with a caulk gun trying to fix that which couldn't be fixed (at least not with caulking. When he finally found out what the real problem was, the warranty company refused to fix it and he eventually sold the home as is. My uncle bought a fifthwheel trailer and a dual wheeled pickup with dealer installed fifth wheel and towing package. The dealer also sold him an extended warranty on the engine and drive train. It was supposed to be good anywhere in the US. When the transmission died in Phoenix he spent a month fighting to get the local deal to honor the warranty. I think he finally got some satifaction because he was retired and could wait out the excuses. No deal is too good to walk away from and if you don't have that attitude then you will be repeatedly taken advantage of in deals through out your life. One estimate is that the average consumer will lose $20,000 over a life time to fraud and abuse in the market place and this study was 20 years ago, today would probably be twice that. Regards, John |
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