What Is an Inspection Contingency? How It Protects Buyers
What Is an Inspection Contingency? How It Protects Buyers
An inspection contingency is a clause in a purchase contract that gives the buyer the right to have the property professionally inspected within a defined time window, and to exit the contract — with their earnest money returned — if the inspection reveals unsatisfactory conditions.
It's one of the most important protections in a real estate transaction, and it's one that buyers in competitive markets are increasingly under pressure to waive. Before you do that, you need to understand exactly what you're giving up.
How an Inspection Contingency Works
When you make an offer on a home, your purchase agreement will typically include a section covering the inspection period. The key elements are:
The inspection window. This is the number of days after the offer is accepted during which you can conduct your inspections. Typical windows are 7 to 14 days, though in very competitive markets some buyers shorten this to 5 days to make their offer more attractive.
The right to inspect. The contingency grants you the right to have licensed professionals inspect the property — the general home inspector, a structural engineer, a sewer scope technician, a pest inspector, a radon tester. Your contract defines which types of inspections are covered.
The response period. After you receive the inspection report, you typically have 2 to 5 business days to submit a repair request, negotiate a price reduction, or notify the seller you're backing out. The specifics depend on your contract form and state.
The outcome options. At the end of the contingency period, you either (1) accept the property in its current condition and proceed to closing, (2) reach an agreement with the seller on repairs or credits and proceed, or (3) invoke the contingency and withdraw from the contract.
If you invoke the contingency within the terms, your earnest money — typically 1 to 3 percent of the purchase price — is returned to you.
What Triggers the Right to Walk
This is where buyers sometimes get confused. The inspection contingency does not give you the right to cancel for any reason at any time. It gives you the right to cancel based on inspection findings within the defined window.
In most standard contracts, the threshold is that the buyer and seller cannot reach an agreement on how to address material defects found during the inspection. The buyer makes a request; the seller responds; if the two sides can't agree, either party can walk.
Some contracts use a "buyer satisfaction" standard — the buyer can exit if they are not satisfied with the inspection, full stop, without needing to cite specific defects or failure to agree. These are more buyer-friendly. Know which type your contract uses before you're in the middle of a dispute.
The inspection contingency does not protect you against:
- Changing your mind about the house for reasons unrelated to inspection findings
- Issues discovered after the contingency period expires
- Items disclosed by the seller prior to the offer that you accepted as-is
- Things the inspector noted but you agreed to overlook in negotiations
The Risk of Waiving the Contingency
In very hot markets, sellers sometimes reject offers that include inspection contingencies, preferring buyers willing to accept the property as-is. Some buyers waive the contingency to compete.
This is a significant financial risk. Waiving your inspection contingency means you're buying the property regardless of what any inspection might reveal. If a pre-closing inspection (which you'd have to arrange on your own dime before submitting the offer) finds a horizontal foundation crack requiring $25,000 in wall stabilization, you still close. You have no recourse through the contingency.
There are ways to mitigate this risk without waiving entirely. Some buyers do a pre-offer inspection — they hire an inspector before submitting the offer and review findings in advance, then offer without a contingency because they've already done their diligence. This costs you inspection fees on houses you don't win, but it lets you compete in fast markets without flying blind.
Another approach is an "inspection for information only" clause — you keep the right to inspect but agree not to request repairs or credits based on the findings. You can still exit if something catastrophic is found, but you're signaling to the seller that you won't nickel-and-dime them on routine maintenance. This is a middle ground some sellers will accept.
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Contingency Timing and Deadlines
Missing your contingency deadline is a serious problem. If you let the window expire without communicating — no repair request, no notice of withdrawal — you may be deemed to have accepted the property in its current condition and waived your right to cancel without forfeiting earnest money.
Mark your inspection deadline on your calendar the day your offer is accepted and treat it like a hard deadline. If you need an extension because the inspector found something that requires a structural engineer's follow-up, request it in writing from the seller immediately, before the original deadline expires.
Your agent's job is to manage these timelines, but don't outsource your awareness of them entirely. Know when your window closes.
The Inspection Contingency in Plain Terms
It's your protection against buying something with hidden problems you didn't agree to accept. It costs you nothing except the inspection fee. In most transactions it's standard practice, and you should think carefully before negotiating it away.
Before your inspection, use the Home Inspection Checklist to understand what your inspector is evaluating and what findings are likely to be deal-level concerns versus routine maintenance — so you can make informed decisions when the report comes back.
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