Selling house & Inspection pit in Garage
Selling house & Inspection pit in Garage
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Discussion

Jordan247

Original Poster:

6,423 posts

226 months

I have recently exchanged contracts on our property and whilst I was clearing the garage it dawned on me that the new owners don't know about the inspection pit in the garage as my car lives in the garage and sits on top of it.

The inspection pit has been built properly and has a small ladder into it, and as someone who likes to work on the cars has been quite useful.

Its probably a bit late now but should I have declared it? I wasn't asked about it and they have carried out a survey. I'm happy to infill it but I would rather not as I have quite a lot to get done prior to moving.

Any advice would be greatly appreciated

Thank you


Countdown

45,663 posts

214 months

I'd leave things as they are to be honest. they might actually appreciate having an inspection pit and, if not, it isn't that difficult to get them boarded over.

Wacky Racer

40,142 posts

265 months

My dad built an inspection pit in his garage, when I was about six. It used to fill up about six inches with water,

I remember him inspecting his FX4 black cab wearing wellingtons, biggrin

It was boarded over with short planks.


Hawkshaw

180 posts

53 months

If the buyers have carried out a survey, then their surveyor should have noted it, so it's not your problem and you can assume the buyers are happy with it. Leave matters as they are.

greygoose

9,182 posts

213 months

I would tell them just so they are aware, you wouldn’t want someone carrying a big box in there on moving day and failing to see it and falling in boxedin .

JimM169

734 posts

140 months

I'd consider it a surprise bonus if I was buying !


RGG

787 posts

35 months



On completion day -
We leave a print-out in the kitchen for the buyers.

Bin collection days.
Internet speeds with the current provider.
4G / 5G speeds with different providers.
Hidden plug socket locations.
Any tips about local services.
And so on.

I would include, " Take care in the garage around the inspection pit"
It goes some way to covering yourself re the safety aspect and there's something in writing to photo before you finally leave.

The way I see house sales is that it's very much like buying / selling a second hand car.

The buyer in particular has not bought the house blind.
1) They've had the opportunity to view.
2) A surveyor has had the opportunity to survey whether the buyer instructed this or didn't.

TA14

13,411 posts

276 months

If you infilled it, then your worst case is that they charge you to dig it out again. Hope that your move goes well.

FlyVintage

231 posts

9 months

Jordan247 said:
It’s probably a bit late now but should I have declared it? I wasn't asked about it and they have carried out a survey. I'm happy to infill it but I would rather not as I have quite a lot to get done prior to moving.
Do you know it wasn’t already noted in their survey? Few sellers get to see the purchasers survey document unless they are using it as leverage. As an aside, I’d have been pretty disappointed if the pit wasn’t in your agents sales description. It would have been a great USP (to admittedly a relatively small sector of buyers).

If you are that bothered, ask your agents advice as to what you should do; that’s what you are paying them for.

LooneyTunes

8,451 posts

176 months

JimM169 said:
I'd consider it a surprise bonus if I was buying !
That was my view when I discovered I’d bought one too. Even bigger bonus was discovering that it had proper lighting installed!

JQ

6,417 posts

197 months

RGG said:
On completion day -
We leave a print-out in the kitchen for the buyers.

Bin collection days.
Internet speeds with the current provider.
4G / 5G speeds with different providers.
Hidden plug socket locations.
Any tips about local services.
And so on.

I would include, " Take care in the garage around the inspection pit"
It goes some way to covering yourself re the safety aspect and there's something in writing to photo before you finally leave.

The way I see house sales is that it's very much like buying / selling a second hand car.

The buyer in particular has not bought the house blind.
1) They've had the opportunity to view.
2) A surveyor has had the opportunity to survey whether the buyer instructed this or didn't.
I guess it depends on how things are presented. If the pit was clearly visible in the garage and the Surveyor didn't pick it up then that's on the buyer, but if it was hidden with boxes or a car and the OP didn't remove the car for the survey then I think it courtesy to mention it's existence, I certainly would.

We bought a house where the vendor wouldn't let us look in the loft (3 viewings), We didn't push it, but felt it was a bit odd. I instructed our surveyor that we'd not seen in the loft and they had to inspect it as part of the process. Transpires there was a full recording studio up there with soundproof room. Caused quite a few issues as it had been built on the ceiling joists and weighed a ton, it delayed the purchase by several weeks.

My view is - if it was visible during the viewings and survey then the OP doesn't need to do anything, but if was hidden by a car or other stuff then the OP should at least let them know. I really can't see what issue it would cause (I'd love a garage with a pit) but there are some odd people about and you don't want to find out they're unhappy at the end of the process or after they've bought it.

southendpier

5,882 posts

247 months

Wacky Racer said:
My dad built an inspection pit in his garage, when I was about six. It used to fill up about six inches with water,

I remember him inspecting his FX4 black cab wearing wellingtons, biggrin

It was boarded over with short planks.
Mine does too - always very careful when using power tools.....

mikeiow

7,353 posts

148 months

RGG said:
On completion day -
We leave a print-out in the kitchen for the buyers.

Bin collection days.
Internet speeds with the current provider.
4G / 5G speeds with different providers.
Hidden plug socket locations.
Any tips about local services.
And so on.

I would include, " Take care in the garage around the inspection pit"
It goes some way to covering yourself re the safety aspect and there's something in writing to photo before you finally leave.

The way I see house sales is that it's very much like buying / selling a second hand car.

The buyer in particular has not bought the house blind.
1) They've had the opportunity to view.
2) A surveyor has had the opportunity to survey whether the buyer instructed this or didn't.
I feel this is sufficient.
No point raising a point that really isn't for contention, but IF raised now, could be!

OutInTheShed

12,514 posts

44 months

I would get my estate agent to mention it to the buyer on some pretext or other.

When you move, don't forget all the junk you're storing in the pit...

Jordan247

Original Poster:

6,423 posts

226 months

Thanks for all of the response.

I think having given is some consideration I will fix the boarding which covers it down to the floor so it will remove the risk of anyone accidently moving it and having an accident. On the paperwork I leave for them (info on where the Stop-cock is, who the neighbours are etc) will mention it

Snow and Rocks

2,949 posts

45 months

Are you not over thinking this a bit?

I've bought a couple of houses now that have had an inspection pit in the garage - never even gave it a second thought tbh as it's a pretty normal thing to have.

If someone's daft enough to remove the planks and fall down the hole then I don't see how that's anything to do with you? No different to someone opening an upstairs window and falling out.