Quote:
Originally Posted by debron911
If you are buying a pre-owned home here please take note that, if any plumbing issues/leaks are found in the inspection report, they may result in their underwriter's threatening to cancel your policy AFTER you close the sale. After living in our first Villages home for seven years we purchased a larger pre-owned home in October. It was inspected, a small water leak from the outside spigot, which did damage some wood around it, was discovered and repaired. A month AFTER closing on the home Tower Hill Insurance sent a cancellation notice. They also are cancelling our previous home's policy because it is "unoccupied" pending a sale. The underwriters have demanded a NEW inspection of our new home not even a "re-inspection" to verify repairs were made will suffice. We sent an invoice from the company that performed all the repairs but that was not satisfactory.
Our insurance agent sent the following: "Any time there has been ANY water related issues this will happen now. This year the companies have all been tightening their underwriting and this is no longer unusual."
Don't know if insurance agents or realtors/sales agents are giving any advice but if your inspection has plumbing issues probably safest course of action is to rectify and have the original inspector verify in writing of the repair. Apparently insurance company underwriters can go in after a closing and a policy is initiated, and make demands or threaten to cancel the policy. Would be interested in any currently working insurance agents think about this.
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You can beat the “unoccupied “ designation if you visit and stay overnight at least once every 60 days. Also the house has to be “habitable” which means you need to leave a bed ( a camp cot will do) linens, towels, a means of preparing food, a table and chair. I went to Goodwill and got a card table and a couple of folding chairs. The kitchen appliances stayed with the house, and of course water and power were on.
Insurance companies are not your friends.