Forum Discussion

wannavolunteerF's avatar
Mar 29, 2018

Inspectors are Worth it. (long but true story)

We all hear lots of advice on purchasing an RV. One thing I had heard was have the one you think you want to buy inspected. I am hoping to buy a MH soon and have sold my TT, so getting really serious.

I had looked at pictures and talked to owners of a MH I was interested in. I first encountered owner when I was asking on Owners group forum about the floorplan. The owner expressed that they loved their floorplan and would be selling theirs soon as they were not going to continue fulltiming. Time went buy and I finally was to the point I was ready to purchase. After looking at pictures sent to me and on-line ad, I made the owner an offer contingent on inspection. I really stressed was it worth the cost for the full “premium” inspection with fluid samples tested and everything, but decided I couldn’t travel to where MH was for that cost (would have been multiple day trip driving or flights, rental car and hotel). I picked an inspector from RVIA website and emailed. He responded right away and then called to see what I knew about RV’s. This allowed him to price his report to the level of detail I wanted.

Inspection was done, and I talked to inspector that day after he completed inspection. He mentioned that there were a few areas that were of concern, but that all the details I would receive in email within about 24 hours. I received the report and it was detailed… over 100 pages and lots of pictures and even a few videos. It annotated some “Life Safety” issues and some “Major” issues. I might have seen the bad tire but would not have seen the spot on the water heater where a rubber gasket/seal was missing. I might have realized the slide didn’t go quite all the way out, but would not have seen the gap at the slide roof that was letting light in. These were issues that I wasn’t willing to accept at the price I offered.

I sent email with “copy and pastes” from inspection report to buyer, who immediately denied that there could be slide issues, since he had previously spent money having one slide repaired. He ignored the “Life Safety” issues and my request for him to repair them along with the Major Issues. He stated that all the things that were wrong with RV were due to normal wear and tear for age, and discounted that preventative maintenance may not have been done completely (which was what I thought when I saw the list of issues, both big and small.
The seller refused to consider repairing, only wanting my best “as is” offer. Oh yeah, he wanted me to send him the full report (or link to website where it resides). After going back and looking carefully at pictures on ads (yes it was advertised two different places), I realized most of the pictures were from brand new. I felt like seller was deceptive in posting new pictures of almost 5 year old MH and then refusing to consider him having repair done was just icing on the cake. He even accused me of taking 6 months of his time in considering the MH, although I told him originally I was NOT ready to buy.

So the real lesson of this is BUYER BEWARE and don’t hesitate to hire an RVIA approved inspector.
Howard, you really saved my butt.

20 Replies

  • Planning wrote:
    wannavolunteerFT wrote:
    I picked an inspector from RVIA website and emailed.


    Sir, Can you point me to the site where you found an inspector?


    NRVIA
  • wannavolunteerFT wrote:
    I picked an inspector from RVIA website and emailed.


    Sir, Can you point me to the site where you found an inspector?
  • stripit wrote:
    Had a friend wanting to buy a motorhome in Az, where I lived and he was in Michigan. Said to me he had all the photos from the seller and was going to buy it and fly out, drive it home. I said would you like me to at least go look? I did and found it was not like the story he was told. It was a fire repair fix up and sell unit. Lots of tell tail signs of the unrepaired fire damage. Photos didn't show how it really was and only having an eyeball on it and touching the surfaces showed what was really there. I took at least 50 photos of what he was willing to buy, and that changed his mind, and we were talking $155,000 the asking selling price. Go Look at what you are about to pay good money for, before you buy...just my opinion

    If I had that much money to spend Id buy brand new and have no worries..buying used just isnt my cup o tea as even with best inspection something such as engine or tranny may go south quick,,cant see inside after all..
  • Had a friend wanting to buy a motorhome in Az, where I lived and he was in Michigan. Said to me he had all the photos from the seller and was going to buy it and fly out, drive it home. I said would you like me to at least go look? I did and found it was not like the story he was told. It was a fire repair fix up and sell unit. Lots of tell tail signs of the unrepaired fire damage. Photos didn't show how it really was and only having an eyeball on it and touching the surfaces showed what was really there. I took at least 50 photos of what he was willing to buy, and that changed his mind, and we were talking $155,000 the asking selling price. Go Look at what you are about to pay good money for, before you buy...just my opinion
  • Thank you for the report. You may be out $1000.00 but, think about how much you're not spending for repairs. (Possibly major repairs?)
  • 4X4van, I guess my comment about 100 plus pages was confusing.. All hundred pages were not problems, some were comments on things that were working, like stove, water heater, fridge... I just meant it was very comprehensive...

    Life safety issues--- gasket/seal at water heater could allow gases inside RV through gaps. Tire had gouge in side and was cracking..

    I would rather not purchase sight unseen, but this "unicorn" was over 800 miles away. Inspection was less than time off work and travel to visit, so although I am out nearly a grand, it was still worth the cost.. and as I said, I wouldn't have caught all the issues (like none of the slides worked as they should.. one you could see daylight around edges.. others had torn sweeps or sweeps that didn't work correctly (indicating a lack of PM)
  • I cringe when I see members here posting that they are buying a rig sight unseen. I offered a free inspection to a friend of mine, but he didn't take me up on it. He bought a travel trailer to live in while he built a house. It had a rotted floor (easily detectable on a short inspection) and had to spend a long weekend replacing the floor before he could move in. I had sent him links to several TTs in good shape and was dumbfounded that he bought this TT sight unseen.

    People spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on a coach, and you can't spend a grand or so to ensure that you're not being hosed? Doesn't make sense to me.

    Queue the usual "inspectors are not liable for what they miss" bunch.
  • 4x4van's avatar
    4x4van
    Explorer III
    Glad the inspector found the issues prior to your purchasing the rig. I'm not sure what "Life Safety" issues consist of, but 100 pages does seem to be excessive for a 4 year old rig. Posting outdated pics on an ad is certainly a serious red flag as well.

    On the other hand, it is also not unreasonable for a private seller to sell "as is", although at a price that would reasonably reflect at least some of those needed repairs. After all, you are buying a used RV, not new.

    I'm not sure I would ever be comfortable purchasing a big ticket item like an RV without seeing it myself, even with a professional inspection. Good luck on your search; hope you end up finding the perfect (for you) rig.