As soon as I started watching this video, my first reaction was that the home buyer didn't get an inspection. What I always found funny about the home buying market is nobody checks the details. If you buy a car, you test drive it, you may even be given a seven day grace period to change your mind. You can have it inspected by a mechanic. You can also inspect it yourself. I mean even if you don't take it to a mechanic you still go through all the options and make sure at least everything is working. From the windshield wipers to the blue tooth connection to your cell phone. But when it comes to houses, you do a walk through, get the pet talk, and then decide if you want to put an offer on the house. And then wait to see if your offer got accepted. Then you still have 30 days to close even after you sign an agreement. Thirty days to have an inspection done by a professional, walk through without the real estate agent so you can take you time checking things yourself like the attic and foundation. You open all the doors, open all the windows, look for gaps where their shouldn't be, etc. Yet nobody does this on a asset you will literally be paying for over the next 30 years. I just don't get it. And then the home buyers have to get the local news and social media involved because they didn't do their due diligence to ensure the home met with their expectations.
As a current home inspector that gets all my business from realtor recommendations: I'm not chum chum with the realtors. I get recommendations and repeat business because of how good and professional I am with both the buyer and the agent.
I got my recommendation from my realtor because he was the best inspector in town-and he was! I read reviews on him and hired him for my new construction! And boy, I’m I glad I did.
My wife and I hired a home inspector for our new home in Maricopa. The inspector found that they used about $7,000 less of insulation than they were supposed to as well as other smaller issues. Well worth the money.
Most houses built today are being built on less and ppl are getting cheated out of their money left and right. The house I recently purchased has styrofoam insulation. It was added under the stucco and the stucco is chipping away. Yet these crappy basic houses are going for over a quarter of a million dollars. Some are cashing in on other ppls hard earned money. But what blows my mind is how close together they are building these houses. If it wasn’t for the trash bins left in the side the houses would be a few feet away from each other. Considering the of amount land that around and yet they compress these homes with zero privacy and charge the insane prices.
@@jdos5643 everything everything for the all mighty dollar, time for retaliation, fighting back these greedy scumbags, they'd sale their own mama for a cool million, greedy bastards
I hope you do not live in a humid area. That type of construction can lead the mold issues that insurance will not cover as the foam with trap moisture between the stucco and the drywall which is where the mold will grow.
I purchased my brand new Chino Valley home in October of 2020. My realtor advised a home inspection. She hired an independent inspector who found a few problems...a huge hole on the backyard wall, a laundry room fan that never switched off, a dining room window that was difficult to open and close, a front door with a ½" gap at the bottom and a leaking dishwasher, which necessitated a new unit and new wood flooring in that area. The inspector emailed me his report, then went back after the repairs were completed. Well worth the $350 charge. All were fixed by the builder prior to my moving in
Cheapest bid gets the job? Builders and contractors make extra money by hiring unskilled or illegal workers, cutting corners and using cheaper materials. You get what you vote for AZ
The chief problem for the lack of quality is the sheer lack of "SKILLED" labor. You have 1 actual licensed trades-person who employs a bunch of TA's (trade assistants) to do most of the work, most likely at minimum wage, to throw stuff up as quickly as possible because the licensed trades-person cannot afford to take on apprentices... you have people in the trade who shouldn't be taking on this work/jobs as a whole.
Agreed. A lot of the issues here aren't laziness, it's from people who clearly lack experience in building homes. The part where they forgot to paint the top of the exterior window sills. That wasn't laziness because the top would have just taken an extra 3min to paint. The moron painter just forgot to do the top.
im not saying your wrong or justifying people not having a license but i know plenty of trades people unlicensed that do a plus work. for example my tile guy is an 18 year old kid and does flawless work. i dont think the issue is licensed or skilled i think the issue is scraping the bottom of the barrel for the cheapest cost
Over the past few years, I've walked through a lot of houses that were under construction. Most construction workers seemed incompetent. I'm guessing most construction workers are just day laborers who were found hanging out on a corner. I wouldn't buy a house built since 2020.
Nope the problem is not day laborers or “illegal” cheap labor. The problem is all the new construction companies trying to shell out as many homes to maximize their profit. They want a carbon copy/cookie cutter homes that will not stand the test of time.
@@devviedowner13 I work in them every day from initial framing to client owned and you are right. The builder's corporate office just keeps pushing every one to lower their bids to the point that you do not make any money. Lowest bid involve inferior products and unskilled labor. Combine these things with lax building code and you get a house that is a turd.
When my home was being built I hired an inspector to work for me. In my family room there was one wall shorter then the other which made the outside wall go at an angle. There was other things he found that were wrong. But he dealed with it all and the repairs. He went over my home thoroughly. He made sure I got the upgraded materials i paid for he check everything made sure all repairs were done right. All before I signed the final papers. Best money I ever spent.
It’s to late, he’s already signed the documents. Now he will get the run around for the next year until the warranty expires and be left with having an attorney involved and the added costs and frustration. I’d be less worried about scratches on the counter top and worry about the roof and structural issues that he hasn’t seen yet
$400 is money well spent on the biggest investment of your life. I had a home inspection done on 3 homes in Arizona I was serious about purchasing and each time there were issues that could've cost me thousands later.
Problem with inspectors is most of what they look at is on the surface, most major problems are hidden, foundation and other areas they cant see. Anybody can see scratches, bad window, crappy paint job. And if they miss something major they have you sign a release so you cant go after them.
I complained about the lack of putty on top of nail holes in wood. They gave me a can of putty to do it myself. The inspector found they didn't seal the sinks in. They hid garbage under the house and buried it in the yard. They didn't have the doors shutting properly. The shower head didn't work because there was dirt in it and no water came out. You have to check everything. Had a short in the bathroom switch and it was apparently broken when I had it fixed. They tried to avoid finishing the windows. Just found out the fireplace was broken all this time when I had someone service it, and fortunately they still made the part for the gas fireplace. There is supposed to be a guy called a finisher who goes around to fix all this stuff. Good luck unless the builder actually cares about quality. Is there a website that rates builders? Our inspector knew the builder was going to do crazy stuff like hide garbage under the house. I think the inspectors all need to post things on the internet about builders. Shouldn't the government make this available to the public?
SIGNATURE HOMEs in Champaign IL has really gone down hill. They dont have a "finisher" anymore, they hired a lady to keep an eye on the houses and to keep us installers on schedule. She wont lift a fking finger to perfect the house. There is low profit in New Construction so we are all trying to do as little as possible and move on to the next house. Basically you are buying the house "as-is-new"...suck it up
burying garbage and hiding it under the house is nothing new lol brick layers used to do that all of the time in the early 1900s lol it was fun finding an old glass milk bottle from the 40's while doing a recent remodel :)
A few years ago, my son and his wife were looking to buy a beautiful new house in a really beautiful neighborhood. They were not going to get an inspection, but my late husband (his father) and I insisted they get one. Good thing they did because the drainage under the house was very poor and there was an enormous amount of mold almost completely covering the underside of the house. They decided not to buy it.
@@tompsheridantsheridant7354 Unlikely. However, Chinese may be the initial investors in the development and skimming the profits. The rest of the crap is good ol' American shysters.
Absolutely inspect any new home. Among other problems, the inspector found that our master toilet had been used as a garbage can by the builders and it wasn't properly connected to the sewer lines and they had skimped on insulation above the master bedroom. Worth every dime
Exactly..,I canceled two contracts because home inspections found big issues with the sewer lines and roof. Someone else on here commented how they had two separate inspections done on a home so that any issues could be found.
It's not just AZ, every major market has the same problems. First thing to do is stay away from the big national companies that rush through a build. Go with a smaller local builder that will keep a better eye on things.
@@cindyjohnson5242and in Vegas too because some apartments that were being built last year got burned down and now these people had to start all over again
As a former of a track build sub contractor. I can say 1st hand. These home builders don't care. The things I have seen pass is crazy. I'm glad this inspector is blowing up! Thx u guys
Two friends in Phoenix bought new homes lately, one the walls are falling away from the house. Crazy poor quality. The housing crash had the skilled craftsmen retirement without new laborers to learn from them. Now it's just people off the street building homes.
If they aren't paying attention to things like the carpet and window installations, venting, and the other obvious defects, what other defects might there be that are hidden? Shoddy workmanship.
The inspector they mentions finds horrible things all the time. Roof tiles not even attached, a strong wind will blow them off. Proper ventilation not attached, gas lines not finished, etc...
The window was installed correctly the off set came from the foundation settling, both dudes need to stop being such pussies and just shut it, the door not closing what a joke I would never ever ever refer Cy the cry baby inspector
@@TerranTaro I’ve seen things like dryer vents and bathroom exhaust fan vents not installed or missing when my neighborhood was built I can only imagine how much worse things have gotten since then.
We just purchased in April for a home that was built in Feb 2023. The inspection resulted in non working HVAC system, crooked window in the master bed room (which doesn't open. just a piece of glass across the top of the sliding door) There was some kind of tile grout material down in our master shower drain, which was causing water to pool back up into the shower itself, too. There was trash in the guest shower drain pipe. Like wtf ? Do they have tons of bills that they need to cut corners to get more money?
My wife and I bought a house built in 1956. My dad gutted the plaster walls and was impressed with the quality of work. He worked in construction for 35 years. Retired in 2000 due to crappy new homes requiring minor and major fixes. He couldn't be part of it anymore.
I’m in a 1950’s house also. A few years ago, I was in a 1932 home, in a neighborhood built for GIs. They may not have been glorious mini-mansions that entitled folks expect right out of college (or is it high school now?), but I wouldn’t want a newly built house now, especially with insurance rates and property taxes. I can’t imagine how those new to the workforce can afford premium homes. I certainly wouldn’t pay seasoned worker income to someone who has no idea of work ethics, such as no personal business while on company time (i.e. texting friends, playing games). Maybe a multigenerational home is a good idea? Built to last for those you love… Maybe folks no longer love their children? I wonder. How sad.
So you are saying your dad stopped working in this industry because the homes quality went down and he was too proud ? Either you are lying or he is an absolute moron.
The biggest problems are the ones you can't see. But if there is obvious surface stuff done badly then you can rest assured there are serious problems underneath. The more difficult situation is when the builders screw up the important hidden stuff but do a good job with the finishes. Everything looks fine on the surface NOW, but 5 years from now you may find major failures. Homes should be inspected throughout the construction process, not just at the end.
This is why you should never buy a flipped home. It’s usually just a coat of paint and new appliances. They don’t fix anything big or structural and I’ve seen people cover up a cracking foundation with a skim coat because they know barely any inspector checks the foundation, let alone the right way.
This happened a lot in 2022 as well. we visited numerous homes for sale and saw the same defects or poor workmanship just one house after another. So true.
Why is it that news reports, whether here in Phoenix or in other major cities, always seem to give the viewer the horror story but never a heads up regarding the identity of the builder? We're always told to do our homework, but the fact of the matter is that the government does not protect consumers, complaints can be scrubbed from the internet, and actions that should be considered crimes are only treated as "civil matters" to be addressed by consumers after some money has been paid and paperwork is signed. Arizona's motto shouldn't be "Ditat Deus." It should be "Caveat Emptor."
It’s all the fast build new communities…. Which is all of them in Arizona. It’s not an individual contractor, it’s lack of regulation and all the cutting of “red tape” that allowed ALL companies in the area to act like this… the only ones suffering is the consumer (who also voted this in) why would anyone care what happens to the consumer?
@@Coconutca I Cocoa! You're absolutely right, obviously. Regarding "who also voted this in," though, I would add that the developers/builders probably contribute a substantial amount of money to many candidates to ensure favorable outcomes (for the developers/builders); that our choices in candidates are more or less limited to whoever the party leaderships determine should be on the ballot; that consumer advocates (unless rich and honest, an unlikely combination) don't get on the ballot; that the local television news media is more interested in taking advertising dollars and avoiding costly lawsuits than in providing useful information; that rich national/international developers/builders force smaller/weaker ones to "compete," and that together they all work to divide and conquer the consumers, voters, and working grunts based on wedge issues. I don't know how to solve any of this, though. As consumers, since all of the homes are built this way and there are no affordable alternatives (rents are high, too), we don't have much of a choice. The options of consumers and workers are as limited as the options of voters, and the politicians know this.
@@timward3116 yeah, welcome to the new america, greedy matters now, fly the flag upside down,..,.distressed, yup you bet we are, unless of course your wealthy
This is why I strongly encourage people to buy the empty land and build their own homes. Get it designed to suit your precise needs, with no wasted space. It will be smaller and save you money. If you're able to do some of the construction work yourself then do so. Hire reputable contractors to do the rest and keep an eagle eye on them. Yes, it's more effort. But you'll benefit for many years afterwards.
@@gamingwitharlen2267 plots of lands cost 3x less than the average house. Wood is expensive true but get connections with shady people and it won’t be so expensive. Materials cost less than you think, however you do need a lot more than you know. But that’s alright it’ll still end up costing you less money to build it from the ground up then buy a house already made. The only thing you’ll lose is probably your dignity when you fail to build a house cuz you suck
@@kelseybrexit5224 ok so the median price of a house is 420k, so according to u land would cost around 100k, plus imagine how much it would cost to build a house with a custom home builder. Ain't no one going to build you a custom house under 400k.
I have a 110 year old house, moved in 30 years ago, easy to maintain, red oak wood all over, now is more expensive than a brand new home. In the $750,000 range. In expensive northern California.
The problem is here in Georgia as well. There should be consumer rights protection for home buyers since these homes are expensive yet poorly constructed.
Happening in Texas too, the houses are falling apart after they were just built. Some of these new master-plan communities had nearly no water pressure because the entire neighborhood is connected to a water system meant for sparsely populated farming communities.
Not even that, what a waste of destroying land for houses that aren't even livable. It infuriates me. I wish they would make affordable housing through the many empty homes I stead of building and building and destroying the green space.
Purchased a new build from Ryan Homes. Very similar issues. Wish we did a home inspection. Would have saved up thousands and held the builders accountable
Same thing here in Texas. When I bought my first new house in L.A. County in 1985, the natural gas line wasn’t connected so my house full of relatives that came up to help us move in had to take cold showers. They tiled the stove in place, the dishwasher in place and the toilets in place. Oh, and they tiled the fire door closed. They wrote in pencil on the tiles that needed to be trimmed to fit and then sealed the tiles so the pencil marks were permanent. The contractor wouldn’t make good on the problems so I contacted his father, who owned the company, and told HIM either fix the problems or give me the contact info for his attorney and I would deal with him. The father drove up from out of the area and he couldn’t believe the problems. He immediately authorized repairs!
Hello- What it really comes down to is the quality and caring of the work that is performed from each and every individual, from the laborers on up to the 'qualified/licensed' persons. I recall the 'old days' when people actually cared and were proud of what they did whether it was digging a ditch, on up to the actual finish work performed in the home. ~New Mexico Home Inspector
People got paid way more back then too. They were actual tradespeople too. The ultimate issue is the rabid greed of profit at all costs by the corporate builders
I live in Virginia near DC-build quality is substandard. I went through a semi-custom home builder. When we came to do our final walk-through in late summer 2016 and found over 2 dozen items for the builder to fix and we ended up having to stay in a short term rental for two week while the tried to take care of the problems (we had rented out the other house we owned and the tenants were already scheduled to move in.) The issues with their newly built, semi-custom home were many; including, some window latches were different from others, several corners inside the house were not plumb and square, joints in baseboards and crown molding were poorly done, the mortar on the stone surround on the fireplace was not a consistent color, the the outside lamppost for the front of the house was missing, wall paint was patchy and had dozens of paint run/drip marks, there were mice in the finished basement, and that’s just to name some of the problems. This was $950K, 7000 sq ft, 4/5 bedroom, 4.5 bath, 3-car side-load, 2 car (25’x28’) detached garage all on a three acre treed lot.
Inspectors don’t inspect. I’ve seen them just drive by, wave or sell hello to the builders. Rarely halt construction for shoddy or defective work, if ever.
Home inspectors are not doing their due diligence either . Bought a home (not a new build) and the inspector missed so many things I don’t believe he didn’t see them.
I live just west of the Phoenix metro. I've watched as houses have been built. I wouldn't buy a home built in 2020 or later. The biggest problems will come when poorly compacted soil drops and poorly constructed foundations/slabs crack and separate. Some foundations have little or no reinforcing mesh, cables, or bars. In about 7 years, the worst will become apparent.
We bought a house that was built in 1875 and the first thing our inspector said was how well built the structure was. Sure it has problems but it is also 138 years old. However, the house is solid and the layout is very interesting unlike the cookie-cutter homes built today.
None of these house will be standing in 30 years much less 138. Everything from the materials used to the craftsmanship today is egregiously subpar. All of these builders should be forced to start over. It’s totally unacceptable.
@@randomrazr you been total bs particle board? We used to build homes in the North out of ancient Old Growth White Pine. Lumber so strong and so true that it’s some of the most expensive building product available today if you can get it at all. It comes from places like the bottom of Lake Superior today. 200 years ago that lumber was cut, transported and hewn right here in the North Country for nation wide distribution. Today hardly a White Pine is left standing.
Same exact problem out here in Texas. Thousands of new homes are being built every day and the quality of the new homes are subpar. Home builders are trying to cut corners and costs anywhere they can. Definitely hire an inspector before moving in.
imagine hiring 100 inspectors and they realize it's all garbage craftmanship for new homes in different cities and towns. Welcome to 2030+ cheapest, fastest!
A guy I know in Texas says he's never bought a house that's less than 10 years old. He lets the original owners take care of all the initial issues such as foundation settling, etc. so he doesn't have as much to worry about.
I've flipped a few homes over the years, and I'm always so proud that the inspectors who have come through on the buyers behalf have always said "wow, you guys did great work here. No corners cut!". I always do things how I'd like them to be done if it were my home. Had the same thing said for properties I maintain in a rough part of the city. City inspectors are like "wow you really clean these places up we never see them this nice around here". It feels good to hear that, because there are so many sheisters in the business who would cut any corner just to make things appear to be quality, when they are really just shoddy work done quickly for appearances alone.
That is great you don’t cut corners but PLEASE, I beg of you, stop painting everything depression toned. I’ll take fixer upper any day over white and black and black and white and grey and white.
Same here, house flippers get a bad wrap sometimes. Sometimes it’s deserved sometimes not. But I know for a fact that the most popular new home builder in my area builds crap homes. Sure they look nice that’s where the attention goes but low quality everything goes into the houses. If you know what to look for.
We just bought our new build in October 2023 & similar issues... I even have a hole in my room around my ceiling fan that is very visible from a fan their people put in... list goes on... crazy we have to fight to get anything done even our white cabinets have missing paint just a lot of things for it to be a new build ready to move in..
New homes are built by lowest bid contractors 100% of the time. The true cost of your new home is revealed after you move in. I’ve made a career out of fixing and finishing homes.
I looked at a house in Gulf Shore, AL that was about 20 years old but had a wavy floor like I only see in houses that are over 100 years old. They must have built it right on sand and not make the foundation right. It was insane. Would not have touched that house.
If they're screwing up the small things, they're screwing up the big things also! My BIL had a new house built and they didn't finish the roof like they were suppose too and it built condensation and they had a ton of problems. ALWAYS spend the money on a home inspection and go around with them. I even caught things my inspector didn't. WHY didn't the city inspectors catch anything when they had to approve the work??? They need to start holding the city responsible also.
ABSOLUTELY have your electrical checked. The most insane, half-assed wiring I have ever seen was in my house. Took forever to find a loose connection in the light in the garage, that fed BOTH bathrooms (and outlets) and the hall light. if YOU don;t check stuff, no one will.
Problem is companies like KB Homes are in the market to just build mass built homes , one division at a time and collect profit. They don’t care about the details, nor do they care what corners are being cut by contractors. Unless investors start saying enough is enough, corporate executives will continue running the business the same way for years to come
@@johnhender Cy recently did a video where the electrical panel was at a high risk for a fire it was so badly done. (Another house down the street already had an electrical fire). Yet it passed code inspection.
10 years?? Stucco on mine and my neighbors came off four months after we moved in, following a hard wind storm. Lost about a third of the stucco on the South side of my house. "It was a bad batch" is what we were told. Still awaiting repairs.
i appreciate you im a drywaller and i have to deal with terrible framing/insulation/plumbing/electrical work all the time framers are missing hole sections forcing us to float corners and its just awful
This is why you shouldnt buy for aesthetic. I'm so happy I opted to purchase A 100 year old home... It was built during a time when quality materials and craftmanship was king.....
@@thebossman3894 when a new home cost me 150k plus it should be perfect. Its your job to do it correctly. idgaf if it takes 3 years to build it. Do it right, and do it correctly or be totally opened to being sued and 100% liable. Its a 30 year home loan, it shouldn't fall into subpar condition in 5, 10, 30 or even 50 years. Contractors are just lazy and money hungry
@@MrGoalie2012 that's a low budget house. You get what you pay for. If you want the perfect house, you better be willing to pay for a custom house. You cant even buy the materials for $150,000. What kind of labor do you expect your gonna get? Your in dream land! You better just buy a tiny house!
@@thebossman3894 150K SHOULDNT be a low-budget home. No average home (especially if they're built in such a hurry and are built in such a shitty manner) shouldn't cost as much as they do. 150K should be medium-range, well-constructed home. But once again, builders are just money hungry and lazy and cut corners wherever they can because they know the average buyer wont notice. Thats why builders should be liable 20 years after construction if any major issues occur with the build. Take pride in your trade, don't be a POS.
@@MrGoalie2012 like I said, you cant even buy the materials for 150000 so you cant expect a well constructed home for that price. You can spend $150000 on a pickup truck right now. Your living in the past
I know a lot of people whose concrete slab foundation is already cracked before the move in! It show in the garage…makes you think how much bigger the cracks are under the house!
As an appliance installer here in Canada, same stuff. Newly built homes can't be trusted these days. Lots of builders aren't able to keep an eye on all the work done by other trades and their own QC guys miss a lot. So be sure to hire a home inspector regardless of the buildings age
It's not manpower, it's greed. They put these together cheaper than ever and the price is sky high. Just look at the top two builders and how much money they are making. Hint: It's DR Horton and Lennar.
Always get a home inspection just as you would still test drive a new car. Anything can have flaws. We had our home inspected before we moved in. We found minor issues like areas where the paint wasn’t finished and the crown molding needed to be fixed but I’m definitely glad we did it.
I'm a 3rd generation home builder and my dad's favorite saying was always "A house built exactly to code is the worst house you can legally buy". Your local codes and inspectors are just there to make sure the home is safe and livable, it's not ensuring you get a quality product. The homeowner in the story went to McDonald's and is complaining he didn't get Filet Mignon. If you want a quality home go find a quality custom home builder. These McMansions are constructed by big companies that sub out every phase of the project to the lowest bidder, they are not "home builders" as most people envision. The end product is a home, but they aren't doing any of the building.
Not quite. This is definitely new since houses have been mass produced for many years and I don’t often hear someone saying their house has many defects. House builders, even the corporate ones, should be expected to deliver a neat job. That’s why this is on the news
Our brand new home, in 2001, “inspected” by the county, developed leaks, that could have ruined a lot. My husband noticed it, after about a year and was able to mitigate the damage, until we could afford to fix it.
Wait until you need to open up your kitchen island and find the empty Corona bottles, sunflower seed shells, Bimbo pastry wrappers, unfinished roach-coach soft tacos, etc. Never met a garbage can they liked, the floor is their friend.
It boils down to the workers...due to decades of companies hiring illegal aliens the tradesmen have "aged-out" and warned others about the dropping wages so the apprentice was replaced by anyone with a heart beat regardless if they communicate well enough to properly learn the trade...instead they concentrate on the "short-cuts" and having an "it's ok" attitude... I may be left or I may be right but I know that I'm not WRONG!
In AZ the workers will use your attic as a trash can for their lunch garbage and the bare concrete floor as their urinal. New home buyers need to inspect properties while it's being built, NOT at the end of the process.
I don't buy any home any younger than 1990. My current home is 1988, and our summer home is 1954. still standing, still beautiful. my mothers home was built 1964. never any problems.
As a prior home inspector, I can say new builds are the worst homes out there and never trust big builders like Dirty Hortons (as many like to call them).
A contractor built a new home in my neighborhood and it was clear that some of the wood was already rotten which was all covered up so by the time the house went on the market the house looked beautiful -- all passed by the inspectors.
Every builder is going to make mistakes. No builder is perfect. What matters is how they handle the customer's concerns. Any builder who tells a buyer that, "Your house is livable" is not a builder I'd ever want to purchase from. I actually recently moved to AZ and bought a new home. It had a few issues, nothing as drastic as what we saw in the video, fortunately. The builder (Centex/Pulte) did a walkthrough with me before the home was done so we could find any things that needed to be fixed; we found a few. After a year came one more inspection to fix anything that materialized during my stay and those were fixed, as well.
ai agree with your point but also some things just shouldnt be missed. i can understand a lose fixture or a door not closing right not a huge deal but to not even put windowns in or forgetting to nail down carpet is another story
I CAN ATTEST TO THIS. PLZ DONT BUY WITH MATTAMY HOMES, I HAD WATER LEAKING THROUGH MY ROOF A YEAR IN A HALF OF MY NEW BUILT HOME. DONT BUY WITH MATTAMY
If you’re buying into Arizona with the continued rise in average temperatures, those tiny imperfections are the least of your problems. Look into your insulation and your HVAC systems to keep you alive when summer days reach 120s.
I own a company that installs retrofit doors and windows around the valley in older homes. What most people don't understand is, and I'm making zero excuses for any shoddy workmanship on these new homes, that homes - especially new homes - settle. That settling commonly causes doors that might have been installed perfectly at the time to rub, latches not to catch, etc. but they are simple fixes for someone that knows what they are doing.
My wife and I bought a new Lennar build in Tolleson on Broadway and 96th. The front door had a huge dent that was puttied. The walls throughout are crooked, floor tiles uneven, electrical lines problems that kept trippingtwo circuits. plumbing issues, roofing issues, sewage issues, AC issues, attic issues, the backyard landscaping flooded even though they made it to look like a model home. The list was huge!!! The minor issues were just like he stated, chipped countertops, uneven door frames so the doors wouldn't close. The sinks valves weren't ever screwed down. They installed a broken water hose behind the toilet. They didn't seal the plumbing wall plates to where the house stank like a sewer issue for months until a plumber found the problem after 6 months. The stucko work on all of the walls is uneven. The tiny gas water heater wasn't installed properly, so the sink near it would burn you, but the back bathroom never received hot water. The heater/ac instructions manual came into the living room vent one evening. A roofing support beam fell onto the ceiling one night. Doing the garden work, they later needed to dig up the sewer pipes and found three of the plumbers tools inside the pipes. Replacing an outlet to put in a dimmer switch with usb ports, they used a 3-inch wood screw to hold the faceplate. The doorbell was defective. I'm sure that we've had more problems, but I'll definitely NEVER recommend a Lennar build to anyone.
This is happening here in Florida as well. Part of the problem is that sub contractors use people who are often here illegally, have no real skills, and they do it for a paycheck to send back home. Not to mention this also pushes down wages for actual professional construction workers who are skilled and actually take pride in their work.
As a retired Home Inspector, I recommend you hire a Home Inspector that IS NOT recommended by the Realtor.
OR the builder.
As soon as I started watching this video, my first reaction was that the home buyer didn't get an inspection.
What I always found funny about the home buying market is nobody checks the details. If you buy a car, you test drive it, you may even be given a seven day grace period to change your mind. You can have it inspected by a mechanic. You can also inspect it yourself. I mean even if you don't take it to a mechanic you still go through all the options and make sure at least everything is working. From the windshield wipers to the blue tooth connection to your cell phone.
But when it comes to houses, you do a walk through, get the pet talk, and then decide if you want to put an offer on the house. And then wait to see if your offer got accepted. Then you still have 30 days to close even after you sign an agreement. Thirty days to have an inspection done by a professional, walk through without the real estate agent so you can take you time checking things yourself like the attic and foundation. You open all the doors, open all the windows, look for gaps where their shouldn't be, etc. Yet nobody does this on a asset you will literally be paying for over the next 30 years.
I just don't get it. And then the home buyers have to get the local news and social media involved because they didn't do their due diligence to ensure the home met with their expectations.
As a current home inspector that gets all my business from realtor recommendations: I'm not chum chum with the realtors. I get recommendations and repeat business because of how good and professional I am with both the buyer and the agent.
I got my recommendation from my realtor because he was the best inspector in town-and he was! I read reviews on him and hired him for my new construction! And boy, I’m I glad I did.
Depends on the area. when I built a home in 2015. They both recommended it.
My wife and I hired a home inspector for our new home in Maricopa. The inspector found that they used about $7,000 less of insulation than they were supposed to as well as other smaller issues. Well worth the money.
Most houses built today are being built on less and ppl are getting cheated out of their money left and right. The house I recently purchased has styrofoam insulation. It was added under the stucco and the stucco is chipping away. Yet these crappy basic houses are going for over a quarter of a million dollars. Some are cashing in on other ppls hard earned money. But what blows my mind is how close together they are building these houses. If it wasn’t for the trash bins left in the side the houses would be a few feet away from each other. Considering the of amount land that around and yet they compress these homes with zero privacy and charge the insane prices.
@@jdos5643 everything everything for the all mighty dollar, time for retaliation, fighting back these greedy scumbags, they'd sale their own mama for a cool million, greedy bastards
@@jdos5643 and they're ugly
I hope you do not live in a humid area. That type of construction can lead the mold issues that insurance will not cover as the foam with trap moisture between the stucco and the drywall which is where the mold will grow.
Did they fix the problems?
I purchased my brand new Chino Valley home in October of 2020. My realtor advised a home inspection. She hired an independent inspector who found a few problems...a huge hole on the backyard wall, a laundry room fan that never switched off, a dining room window that was difficult to open and close, a front door with a ½" gap at the bottom and a leaking dishwasher, which necessitated a new unit and new wood flooring in that area. The inspector emailed me his report, then went back after the repairs were completed. Well worth the $350 charge. All were fixed by the builder prior to my moving in
Always get inspections, even multiple inspections along the building process.
Should have gone with tile or stained concrete, not wood. Clean-up is easier.
It's hard to believe how awful most houses are.
@DIVISIONINCISION...Or, you know, mind your own business and let them make they're own design decisions?
Cheapest bid gets the job? Builders and contractors make extra money by hiring unskilled or illegal workers, cutting corners and using cheaper materials.
You get what you vote for AZ
recognized Cy by his hat in the thumbnail. he's the kind of person you want doing the inspection on your home.
A home inspection is worth EVERY penny.
My $350 home inspection netted us a $3100 credit toward our closing costs. Extremely worth the money!
I got about 2% in reduction of price on $600k buy
Unfortunalty most inspectors will let you down too. Glad this homeowner got a honorable one
The chief problem for the lack of quality is the sheer lack of "SKILLED" labor. You have 1 actual licensed trades-person who employs a bunch of TA's (trade assistants) to do most of the work, most likely at minimum wage, to throw stuff up as quickly as possible because the licensed trades-person cannot afford to take on apprentices... you have people in the trade who shouldn't be taking on this work/jobs as a whole.
Agreed. A lot of the issues here aren't laziness, it's from people who clearly lack experience in building homes. The part where they forgot to paint the top of the exterior window sills. That wasn't laziness because the top would have just taken an extra 3min to paint. The moron painter just forgot to do the top.
im not saying your wrong or justifying people not having a license but i know plenty of trades people unlicensed that do a plus work. for example my tile guy is an 18 year old kid and does flawless work. i dont think the issue is licensed or skilled i think the issue is scraping the bottom of the barrel for the cheapest cost
If the project doesnt have a good super to do punch lists at major steps will cause problems that go unnoticed until the end
@@addanametocontinue Agree with you. They do hire alot of messicans.
This is what happens when companies hire under the table at the cheapest rate possible
Over the past few years, I've walked through a lot of houses that were under construction. Most construction workers seemed incompetent. I'm guessing most construction workers are just day laborers who were found hanging out on a corner. I wouldn't buy a house built since 2020.
Illegal cheap labor
@@H0DLTHED0R , Yup! A lot of the work is done by unskilled day laborers.
Better move that date back about 20 years.
Nope the problem is not day laborers or “illegal” cheap labor. The problem is all the new construction companies trying to shell out as many homes to maximize their profit. They want a carbon copy/cookie cutter homes that will not stand the test of time.
@@devviedowner13 I work in them every day from initial framing to client owned and you are right. The builder's corporate office just keeps pushing every one to lower their bids to the point that you do not make any money. Lowest bid involve inferior products and unskilled labor. Combine these things with lax building code and you get a house that is a turd.
When my home was being built I hired an inspector to work for me. In my family room there was one wall shorter then the other which made the outside wall go at an angle. There was other things he found that were wrong. But he dealed with it all and the repairs. He went over my home thoroughly. He made sure I got the upgraded materials i paid for he check everything made sure all repairs were done right. All before I signed the final papers. Best money I ever spent.
"your house is livable"
yeah and my bank account is not your doormat.
And that crushed burger at burger king is "edible"
Yea, and so is a tent.
It’s to late, he’s already signed the documents. Now he will get the run around for the next year until the warranty expires and be left with having an attorney involved and the added costs and frustration. I’d be less worried about scratches on the counter top and worry about the roof and structural issues that he hasn’t seen yet
$400 is money well spent on the biggest investment of your life. I had a home inspection done on 3 homes in Arizona I was serious about purchasing and each time there were issues that could've cost me thousands later.
Problem with inspectors is most of what they look at is on the surface, most major problems are hidden, foundation and other areas they cant see. Anybody can see scratches, bad window, crappy paint job. And if they miss something major they have you sign a release so you cant go after them.
@@sundancer3700 it’s still better than nothing
Not just small items. Broken trusses. Insufficient insulation. Dangerous gas and electrical issues
Why build or buy in places with very limited water supply and excessive heat. It doesn’t make sense to me. Things are only going to go down hill.
I complained about the lack of putty on top of nail holes in wood. They gave me a can of putty to do it myself. The inspector found they didn't seal the sinks in. They hid garbage under the house and buried it in the yard. They didn't have the doors shutting properly. The shower head didn't work because there was dirt in it and no water came out. You have to check everything. Had a short in the bathroom switch and it was apparently broken when I had it fixed. They tried to avoid finishing the windows. Just found out the fireplace was broken all this time when I had someone service it, and fortunately they still made the part for the gas fireplace. There is supposed to be a guy called a finisher who goes around to fix all this stuff. Good luck unless the builder actually cares about quality. Is there a website that rates builders? Our inspector knew the builder was going to do crazy stuff like hide garbage under the house. I think the inspectors all need to post things on the internet about builders. Shouldn't the government make this available to the public?
Most home inspectors are horrible and don't know what they are doing.
Life story rates builders
SIGNATURE HOMEs in Champaign IL has really gone down hill. They dont have a "finisher" anymore, they hired a lady to keep an eye on the houses and to keep us installers on schedule. She wont lift a fking finger to perfect the house. There is low profit in New Construction so we are all trying to do as little as possible and move on to the next house. Basically you are buying the house "as-is-new"...suck it up
Landlord investors , contactors and flippers care about money $ and profit. NOT human safety or crafstmanship.
burying garbage and hiding it under the house is nothing new lol brick layers used to do that all of the time in the early 1900s lol it was fun finding an old glass milk bottle from the 40's while doing a recent remodel :)
A few years ago, my son and his wife were looking to buy a beautiful new house in a really beautiful neighborhood. They were not going to get an inspection, but my late husband (his father) and I insisted they get one. Good thing they did because the drainage under the house was very poor and there was an enormous amount of mold almost completely covering the underside of the house. They decided not to buy it.
New house. New. These builders are horrible. Slap them up as fast as possible. No care.
@@karlabritfeld7104 exactly. Chinese contractors.
@@tompsheridantsheridant7354 Unlikely. However, Chinese may be the initial investors in the development and skimming the profits.
The rest of the crap is good ol' American shysters.
How long for the mold to grow
Sounds like Landsea Homes
Absolutely inspect any new home. Among other problems, the inspector found that our master toilet had been used as a garbage can by the builders and it wasn't properly connected to the sewer lines and they had skimped on insulation above the master bedroom. Worth every dime
Exactly..,I canceled two contracts because home inspections found big issues with the sewer lines and roof. Someone else on here commented how they had two separate inspections done on a home so that any issues could be found.
Built as cheap as possible by the lowest bidder, useing the cheapest materials what could go wrong.
And then charging the highest price.
It is a problem in the tile and stone industry as well.
Exactly why I do not want to fly…
@PeaceOfGrace or buy a car,hamburger, religion, or anything else sold for a profit.
Never trust anyone who is trying to sell you something.
and don't forget using that cheap (dare say illegal), unskilled labor to get it done.
What a judge wants to hear (to give you judicial relief) is that the house is not in the condition the contract says it should be in.
Working in a trade dealing with new and refurbished homes, I can absolutely attest to this
Look how closely each house is to the next. 👀
That tells me I would not buy a new house in Arizona. Thanks for the heads up.
It's not just AZ, every major market has the same problems. First thing to do is stay away from the big national companies that rush through a build. Go with a smaller local builder that will keep a better eye on things.
Very bad in Texas also!😢
@@cindyjohnson5242and in Vegas too because some apartments that were being built last year got burned down and now these people had to start all over again
As a former of a track build sub contractor. I can say 1st hand. These home builders don't care. The things I have seen pass is crazy. I'm glad this inspector is blowing up! Thx u guys
Two friends in Phoenix bought new homes lately, one the walls are falling away from the house. Crazy poor quality. The housing crash had the skilled craftsmen retirement without new laborers to learn from them. Now it's just people off the street building homes.
In addition to hiring an inspector, try to find out how many construction defect claims/lawsuits there are against the builder.
If they aren't paying attention to things like the carpet and window installations, venting, and the other obvious defects, what other defects might there be that are hidden? Shoddy workmanship.
The inspector they mentions finds horrible things all the time. Roof tiles not even attached, a strong wind will blow them off. Proper ventilation not attached, gas lines not finished, etc...
The window was installed correctly the off set came from the foundation settling, both dudes need to stop being such pussies and just shut it, the door not closing what a joke
I would never ever ever refer Cy the cry baby inspector
@@TerranTaro I’ve seen things like dryer vents and bathroom exhaust fan vents not installed or missing when my neighborhood was built I can only imagine how much worse things have gotten since then.
Hire Cyfi! He can tell you
We just purchased in April for a home that was built in Feb 2023. The inspection resulted in non working HVAC system, crooked window in the master bed room (which doesn't open. just a piece of glass across the top of the sliding door)
There was some kind of tile grout material down in our master shower drain, which was causing water to pool back up into the shower itself, too. There was trash in the guest shower drain pipe.
Like wtf ?
Do they have tons of bills that they need to cut corners to get more money?
My wife and I bought a house built in 1956. My dad gutted the plaster walls and was impressed with the quality of work. He worked in construction for 35 years. Retired in 2000 due to crappy new homes requiring minor and major fixes. He couldn't be part of it anymore.
Your daddy came in to fix your problems?
I’m in a 1950’s house also. A few years ago, I was in a 1932 home, in a neighborhood built for GIs. They may not have been glorious mini-mansions that entitled folks expect right out of college (or is it high school now?), but I wouldn’t want a newly built house now, especially with insurance rates and property taxes.
I can’t imagine how those new to the workforce can afford premium homes. I certainly wouldn’t pay seasoned worker income to someone who has no idea of work ethics, such as no personal business while on company time (i.e. texting friends, playing games).
Maybe a multigenerational home is a good idea?
Built to last for those you love…
Maybe folks no longer love their children?
I wonder.
How sad.
@@MoralWorldEater ...barely anyone has money to buy their kids a home, and even if they do it's likely for retirement
@@sneksteppy I hope you never need help from someone else someday. What a poor take.
So you are saying your dad stopped working in this industry because the homes quality went down and he was too proud ? Either you are lying or he is an absolute moron.
The biggest problems are the ones you can't see. But if there is obvious surface stuff done badly then you can rest assured there are serious problems underneath.
The more difficult situation is when the builders screw up the important hidden stuff but do a good job with the finishes. Everything looks fine on the surface NOW, but 5 years from now you may find major failures. Homes should be inspected throughout the construction process, not just at the end.
👏👏
Very true. You don't inspect quality, you build it in.
This is why you should never buy a flipped home. It’s usually just a coat of paint and new appliances. They don’t fix anything big or structural and I’ve seen people cover up a cracking foundation with a skim coat because they know barely any inspector checks the foundation, let alone the right way.
Cities would have to hire 100s if not 1000s of inspectors! How many do they have maybe 5?
Homes are meant to be inspected throughout construction by the city or county (I’m nearly certain)
A tent is "livable" 🤣
This happened a lot in 2022 as well. we visited numerous homes for sale and saw the same defects or poor workmanship just one house after another. So true.
Why is it that news reports, whether here in Phoenix or in other major cities, always seem to give the viewer the horror story but never a heads up regarding the identity of the builder? We're always told to do our homework, but the fact of the matter is that the government does not protect consumers, complaints can be scrubbed from the internet, and actions that should be considered crimes are only treated as "civil matters" to be addressed by consumers after some money has been paid and paperwork is signed. Arizona's motto shouldn't be "Ditat Deus." It should be "Caveat Emptor."
It’s all the fast build new communities…. Which is all of them in Arizona.
It’s not an individual contractor, it’s lack of regulation and all the cutting of “red tape” that allowed ALL companies in the area to act like this… the only ones suffering is the consumer (who also voted this in) why would anyone care what happens to the consumer?
@@Coconutca I Cocoa! You're absolutely right, obviously. Regarding "who also voted this in," though, I would add that the developers/builders probably contribute a substantial amount of money to many candidates to ensure favorable outcomes (for the developers/builders); that our choices in candidates are more or less limited to whoever the party leaderships determine should be on the ballot; that consumer advocates (unless rich and honest, an unlikely combination) don't get on the ballot; that the local television news media is more interested in taking advertising dollars and avoiding costly lawsuits than in providing useful information; that rich national/international developers/builders force smaller/weaker ones to "compete," and that together they all work to divide and conquer the consumers, voters, and working grunts based on wedge issues. I don't know how to solve any of this, though. As consumers, since all of the homes are built this way and there are no affordable alternatives (rents are high, too), we don't have much of a choice. The options of consumers and workers are as limited as the options of voters, and the politicians know this.
@@timward3116 yeah, welcome to the new america, greedy matters now, fly the flag upside down,..,.distressed, yup you bet we are, unless of course your wealthy
This is why I strongly encourage people to buy the empty land and build their own homes. Get it designed to suit your precise needs, with no wasted space. It will be smaller and save you money. If you're able to do some of the construction work yourself then do so. Hire reputable contractors to do the rest and keep an eagle eye on them. Yes, it's more effort. But you'll benefit for many years afterwards.
Heck yeah
@@stephensullivan1011 Not everyone can afford it
@@gamingwitharlen2267 plots of lands cost 3x less than the average house. Wood is expensive true but get connections with shady people and it won’t be so expensive. Materials cost less than you think, however you do need a lot more than you know. But that’s alright it’ll still end up costing you less money to build it from the ground up then buy a house already made. The only thing you’ll lose is probably your dignity when you fail to build a house cuz you suck
@@kelseybrexit5224 ok so the median price of a house is 420k, so according to u land would cost around 100k, plus imagine how much it would cost to build a house with a custom home builder. Ain't no one going to build you a custom house under 400k.
'reputable contractors' - therein lies the problem. The avg Joe isn't going to know reputable from irreputable.
I have a 110 year old house, moved in 30 years ago, easy to maintain, red oak wood all over, now is more expensive than a brand new home. In the $750,000 range. In expensive northern California.
Zzzzzzzzz.....
Plunk....
This lake is full of compliments, caught 3 already! LOL!
Check all your outlets….check all counter top, open all windows…..excellent idea
The problem is here in Georgia as well. There should be consumer rights protection for home buyers since these homes are expensive yet poorly constructed.
Happening in Texas too, the houses are falling apart after they were just built. Some of these new master-plan communities had nearly no water pressure because the entire neighborhood is connected to a water system meant for sparsely populated farming communities.
Thank you for exposing this! So sad, for so many families
Not even that, what a waste of destroying land for houses that aren't even livable. It infuriates me. I wish they would make affordable housing through the many empty homes I stead of building and building and destroying the green space.
This also describes all the houses in Florida and California from 2003 to 2008.
Cy Porter is a very good home inspector one of the best.
Purchased a new build from Ryan Homes. Very similar issues. Wish we did a home inspection. Would have saved up thousands and held the builders accountable
Definitely need inspections
Same thing here in Texas. When I bought my first new house in L.A. County in 1985, the natural gas line wasn’t connected so my house full of relatives that came up to help us move in had to take cold showers. They tiled the stove in place, the dishwasher in place and the toilets in place. Oh, and they tiled the fire door closed. They wrote in pencil on the tiles that needed to be trimmed to fit and then sealed the tiles so the pencil marks were permanent. The contractor wouldn’t make good on the problems so I contacted his father, who owned the company, and told HIM either fix the problems or give me the contact info for his attorney and I would deal with him. The father drove up from out of the area and he couldn’t believe the problems. He immediately authorized repairs!
I wish they would take the extra time to do it right
Hello- What it really comes down to is the quality and caring of the work that is performed from each and every individual, from the laborers on up to the 'qualified/licensed' persons. I recall the 'old days' when people actually cared and were proud of what they did whether it was digging a ditch, on up to the actual finish work performed in the home.
~New Mexico Home Inspector
People got paid way more back then too. They were actual tradespeople too.
The ultimate issue is the rabid greed of profit at all costs by the corporate builders
I live in Virginia near DC-build quality is substandard. I went through a semi-custom home builder. When we came to do our final walk-through in late summer 2016 and found over 2 dozen items for the builder to fix and we ended up having to stay in a short term rental for two week while the tried to take care of the problems (we had rented out the other house we owned and the tenants were already scheduled to move in.) The issues with their newly built, semi-custom home were many; including, some window latches were different from others, several corners inside the house were not plumb and square, joints in baseboards and crown molding were poorly done, the mortar on the stone surround on the fireplace was not a consistent color, the the outside lamppost for the front of the house was missing, wall paint was patchy and had dozens of paint run/drip marks, there were mice in the finished basement, and that’s just to name some of the problems. This was $950K, 7000 sq ft, 4/5 bedroom, 4.5 bath, 3-car side-load, 2 car (25’x28’) detached garage all on a three acre treed lot.
I have friends and family around there, if your in the military should they have helped with assisting you with these issues
400 dollars for a home inspection can save you thousands.
Just bought a brand new build 1.5 years ago.
I agree with this 100%
It’s a wonder these homes are passing inspection.
Inspectors don’t inspect. I’ve seen them just drive by, wave or sell hello to the builders. Rarely halt construction for shoddy or defective work, if ever.
Home inspectors are not doing their due diligence either . Bought a home (not a new build) and the inspector missed so many things I don’t believe he didn’t see them.
A lot of them are likely being paid off to be favorable
I live just west of the Phoenix metro. I've watched as houses have been built. I wouldn't buy a home built in 2020 or later. The biggest problems will come when poorly compacted soil drops and poorly constructed foundations/slabs crack and separate. Some foundations have little or no reinforcing mesh, cables, or bars. In about 7 years, the worst will become apparent.
We bought a house that was built in 1875 and the first thing our inspector said was how well built the structure was. Sure it has problems but it is also 138 years old. However, the house is solid and the layout is very interesting unlike the cookie-cutter homes built today.
My friend’s d house is 300 years old.
@@NycBeauty My uncle owns a llama.
None of these house will be standing in 30 years much less 138. Everything from the materials used to the craftsmanship today is egregiously subpar. All of these builders should be forced to start over. It’s totally unacceptable.
@@markberman8958 MDF , osb, engineered floor beams, how long will they last?
@@randomrazr you been total bs particle board? We used to build homes in the North out of ancient Old Growth White Pine. Lumber so strong and so true that it’s some of the most expensive building product available today if you can get it at all. It comes from places like the bottom of Lake Superior today. 200 years ago that lumber was cut, transported and hewn right here in the North Country for nation wide distribution. Today hardly a White Pine is left standing.
Same exact problem out here in Texas. Thousands of new homes are being built every day and the quality of the new homes are subpar. Home builders are trying to cut corners and costs anywhere they can. Definitely hire an inspector before moving in.
imagine hiring 100 inspectors and they realize it's all garbage craftmanship for new homes in different cities and towns. Welcome to 2030+ cheapest, fastest!
A guy I know in Texas says he's never bought a house that's less than 10 years old. He lets the original owners take care of all the initial issues such as foundation settling, etc. so he doesn't have as much to worry about.
This is why i by older homes. Not only do i hate the look of new homes but the care, craftsmanship and pure artistry are missing
I've flipped a few homes over the years, and I'm always so proud that the inspectors who have come through on the buyers behalf have always said "wow, you guys did great work here. No corners cut!".
I always do things how I'd like them to be done if it were my home.
Had the same thing said for properties I maintain in a rough part of the city. City inspectors are like "wow you really clean these places up we never see them this nice around here".
It feels good to hear that, because there are so many sheisters in the business who would cut any corner just to make things appear to be quality, when they are really just shoddy work done quickly for appearances alone.
That is great you don’t cut corners but PLEASE, I beg of you, stop painting everything depression toned. I’ll take fixer upper any day over white and black and black and white and grey and white.
Same here! It’s just a good feeling after you’ve done proper work and know the new owners will appreciate the hard work
You’re one of the good people
Same here, house flippers get a bad wrap sometimes. Sometimes it’s deserved sometimes not. But I know for a fact that the most popular new home builder in my area builds crap homes. Sure they look nice that’s where the attention goes but low quality everything goes into the houses. If you know what to look for.
We just bought our new build in October 2023 & similar issues... I even have a hole in my room around my ceiling fan that is very visible from a fan their people put in... list goes on... crazy we have to fight to get anything done even our white cabinets have missing paint just a lot of things for it to be a new build ready to move in..
New homes are built by lowest bid contractors 100% of the time. The true cost of your new home is revealed after you move in. I’ve made a career out of fixing and finishing homes.
If you're buying a HD Horton house, I suggest you getting an inspection and home warranty.
Stick homes. Way overpriced. SI is a legit inspector
Built in Amurica ain't what it used to be. We've switched to the ideology of getting ours at the cost of others.
When I see window and door problems, my mind goes directly to potential foundation issues - could be scary expensive to fix.
What foundation?
I looked at a house in Gulf Shore, AL that was about 20 years old but had a wavy floor like I only see in houses that are over 100 years old. They must have built it right on sand and not make the foundation right. It was insane. Would not have touched that house.
If they're screwing up the small things, they're screwing up the big things also! My BIL had a new house built and they didn't finish the roof like they were suppose too and it built condensation and they had a ton of problems. ALWAYS spend the money on a home inspection and go around with them. I even caught things my inspector didn't. WHY didn't the city inspectors catch anything when they had to approve the work??? They need to start holding the city responsible also.
ABSOLUTELY have your electrical checked. The most insane, half-assed wiring I have ever seen was in my house. Took forever to find a loose connection in the light in the garage, that fed BOTH bathrooms (and outlets) and the hall light. if YOU don;t check stuff, no one will.
I've seen that guys inspection videos.. I would not buy a new house in arizona if you paid me to.
Problem is companies like KB Homes are in the market to just build mass built homes , one division at a time and collect profit. They don’t care about the details, nor do they care what corners are being cut by contractors. Unless investors start saying enough is enough, corporate executives will continue running the business the same way for years to come
i think what makes this worse is that they selling these jacklegg homes for 250-800k and you can't open windows or close doors and sh*T
The municipality has building inspectors that pass them. Why aren’t they held accountable?
Building inspectors only enforce the minimum building code, they do not inspect the quality of construction If It meets The minimum it gets a go
@@johnhender Then what good are they?
@@whyyeseyecthey force builders to do the minimum to keep occupants safe.
@@johnhender Cy recently did a video where the electrical panel was at a high risk for a fire it was so badly done. (Another house down the street already had an electrical fire). Yet it passed code inspection.
The construction companies are now on profit over quality plans with laborers as opposed to experienced craftsman .... been this way for 20+ years.
Just wait 10 years you will see stucco falling apart!
10 years?? Stucco on mine and my neighbors came off four months after we moved in, following a hard wind storm. Lost about a third of the stucco on the South side of my house. "It was a bad batch" is what we were told. Still awaiting repairs.
Unbelievable! Usually builder is responsible for 10 years starting the day your house was built. But that depends on your state.
i appreciate you im a drywaller and i have to deal with terrible framing/insulation/plumbing/electrical work all the time framers are missing hole sections forcing us to float corners and its just awful
And that rain is heading straight to your house. Because it's usually on the sides with no OSB on it.
This is why you shouldnt buy for aesthetic. I'm so happy I opted to purchase A 100 year old home... It was built during a time when quality materials and craftmanship was king.....
Survivorship bias
That is appalling shame on those builders. They should have their license pulled.
Why because of paint or trim or carpet? Any new home can be licked apart.
@@thebossman3894 when a new home cost me 150k plus it should be perfect. Its your job to do it correctly. idgaf if it takes 3 years to build it. Do it right, and do it correctly or be totally opened to being sued and 100% liable. Its a 30 year home loan, it shouldn't fall into subpar condition in 5, 10, 30 or even 50 years. Contractors are just lazy and money hungry
@@MrGoalie2012 that's a low budget house. You get what you pay for. If you want the perfect house, you better be willing to pay for a custom house. You cant even buy the materials for $150,000. What kind of labor do you expect your gonna get? Your in dream land! You better just buy a tiny house!
@@thebossman3894 150K SHOULDNT be a low-budget home. No average home (especially if they're built in such a hurry and are built in such a shitty manner) shouldn't cost as much as they do. 150K should be medium-range, well-constructed home. But once again, builders are just money hungry and lazy and cut corners wherever they can because they know the average buyer wont notice. Thats why builders should be liable 20 years after construction if any major issues occur with the build. Take pride in your trade, don't be a POS.
@@MrGoalie2012 like I said, you cant even buy the materials for 150000 so you cant expect a well constructed home for that price. You can spend $150000 on a pickup truck right now. Your living in the past
It's not bad workmanship, it's bad contractors who cheap out and cut corners.
I know a lot of people whose concrete slab foundation is already cracked before the move in! It show in the garage…makes you think how much bigger the cracks are under the house!
There aren’t skilled trades anymore. These are just general labor.
As an appliance installer here in Canada, same stuff. Newly built homes can't be trusted these days. Lots of builders aren't able to keep an eye on all the work done by other trades and their own QC guys miss a lot. So be sure to hire a home inspector regardless of the buildings age
It's not manpower, it's greed. They put these together cheaper than ever and the price is sky high. Just look at the top two builders and how much money they are making. Hint: It's DR Horton and Lennar.
Always get a home inspection just as you would still test drive a new car. Anything can have flaws. We had our home inspected before we moved in. We found minor issues like areas where the paint wasn’t finished and the crown molding needed to be fixed but I’m definitely glad we did it.
Lived in a house outside of Boston when i was a kid built in 1717. Serious. It was in better shape than any pos in AZ.
Rapid and quality never go along. Today, everything is about quick, quick....just finish job.
and it's all about profit, profit, profit
That will be the best $400 you ever spent long-term.
I'm a 3rd generation home builder and my dad's favorite saying was always "A house built exactly to code is the worst house you can legally buy". Your local codes and inspectors are just there to make sure the home is safe and livable, it's not ensuring you get a quality product. The homeowner in the story went to McDonald's and is complaining he didn't get Filet Mignon. If you want a quality home go find a quality custom home builder. These McMansions are constructed by big companies that sub out every phase of the project to the lowest bidder, they are not "home builders" as most people envision. The end product is a home, but they aren't doing any of the building.
Yeah the guy was complaining about nail size scratches... at least find bigger things to complain...
@@wc4109 I bet he cheap out on the pre-purchase inspection.
Not quite. This is definitely new since houses have been mass produced for many years and I don’t often hear someone saying their house has many defects. House builders, even the corporate ones, should be expected to deliver a neat job. That’s why this is on the news
"Safe and livable" is quality... you forget that there was a house shown with carbon monoxide seeping into the unfinished room?
Don't sign the paperwork until it's done. They're NOT coming back to fix it. Home warranties are a joke.
Home warranties aren't meant to cover everything, especially aesthetic stuff.
Our brand new home, in 2001, “inspected” by the county, developed leaks, that could have ruined a lot. My husband noticed it, after about a year and was able to mitigate the damage, until we could afford to fix it.
Get it inspected while it's being built. You would be surprised what's behind the drywall.
Buy old homes and rebuild...
Wait until you need to open up your kitchen island and find the empty Corona bottles, sunflower seed shells, Bimbo pastry wrappers, unfinished roach-coach soft tacos, etc. Never met a garbage can they liked, the floor is their friend.
It boils down to the workers...due to decades of companies hiring illegal aliens the tradesmen have "aged-out" and warned others about the dropping wages so the apprentice was replaced by anyone with a heart beat regardless if they communicate well enough to properly learn the trade...instead they concentrate on the "short-cuts" and having an "it's ok" attitude... I may be left or I may be right but I know that I'm not WRONG!
In AZ the workers will use your attic as a trash can for their lunch garbage and the bare concrete floor as their urinal. New home buyers need to inspect properties while it's being built, NOT at the end of the process.
I don't buy any home any younger than 1990. My current home is 1988, and our summer home is 1954. still standing, still beautiful. my mothers home was built 1964. never any problems.
I wish more inspectors were like Cy. I don't live in Az anymore, but I watch his videos pretty regularly.
They didn’t finish the exhaust vent for the water heater? They could have killed someone…
As a prior home inspector, I can say new builds are the worst homes out there and never trust big builders like Dirty Hortons (as many like to call them).
A contractor built a new home in my neighborhood and it was clear that some of the wood was already rotten which was all covered up so by the time the house went on the market the house looked beautiful -- all passed by the inspectors.
Housing has been the biggest scam for the last 50 years and its onlt getting worst.
Every builder is going to make mistakes. No builder is perfect. What matters is how they handle the customer's concerns. Any builder who tells a buyer that, "Your house is livable" is not a builder I'd ever want to purchase from. I actually recently moved to AZ and bought a new home. It had a few issues, nothing as drastic as what we saw in the video, fortunately. The builder (Centex/Pulte) did a walkthrough with me before the home was done so we could find any things that needed to be fixed; we found a few. After a year came one more inspection to fix anything that materialized during my stay and those were fixed, as well.
ai agree with your point but also some things just shouldnt be missed. i can understand a lose fixture or a door not closing right not a huge deal but to not even put windowns in or forgetting to nail down carpet is another story
My contractor says the 1939 basement wood is much much stronger than any wood that is available today. Just saying. ( We are doing an add on)
I CAN ATTEST TO THIS. PLZ DONT BUY WITH MATTAMY HOMES, I HAD WATER LEAKING THROUGH MY ROOF A YEAR IN A HALF OF MY NEW BUILT HOME. DONT BUY WITH MATTAMY
If you’re buying into Arizona with the continued rise in average temperatures, those tiny imperfections are the least of your problems. Look into your insulation and your HVAC systems to keep you alive when summer days reach 120s.
They should do inspection
I own a company that installs retrofit doors and windows around the valley in older homes. What most people don't understand is, and I'm making zero excuses for any shoddy workmanship on these new homes, that homes - especially new homes - settle. That settling commonly causes doors that might have been installed perfectly at the time to rub, latches not to catch, etc. but they are simple fixes for someone that knows what they are doing.
Complaining about a door not closing makes my head spin as a complaint? I could fix that in 2 seconds with a hammer and a nailer
My wife and I bought a new Lennar build in Tolleson on Broadway and 96th. The front door had a huge dent that was puttied. The walls throughout are crooked, floor tiles uneven, electrical lines problems that kept trippingtwo circuits. plumbing issues, roofing issues, sewage issues, AC issues, attic issues, the backyard landscaping flooded even though they made it to look like a model home. The list was huge!!! The minor issues were just like he stated, chipped countertops, uneven door frames so the doors wouldn't close. The sinks valves weren't ever screwed down. They installed a broken water hose behind the toilet. They didn't seal the plumbing wall plates to where the house stank like a sewer issue for months until a plumber found the problem after 6 months. The stucko work on all of the walls is uneven. The tiny gas water heater wasn't installed properly, so the sink near it would burn you, but the back bathroom never received hot water. The heater/ac instructions manual came into the living room vent one evening. A roofing support beam fell onto the ceiling one night. Doing the garden work, they later needed to dig up the sewer pipes and found three of the plumbers tools inside the pipes. Replacing an outlet to put in a dimmer switch with usb ports, they used a 3-inch wood screw to hold the faceplate. The doorbell was defective. I'm sure that we've had more problems, but I'll definitely NEVER recommend a Lennar build to anyone.
This is happening here in Florida as well. Part of the problem is that sub contractors use people who are often here illegally, have no real skills, and they do it for a paycheck to send back home.
Not to mention this also pushes down wages for actual professional construction workers who are skilled and actually take pride in their work.
For what the home builder is being paid, yes! they SHOULD pay attention to detail. Just moved into a new build about five months ago in Prescott AZ.
Did you find any issues?