Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:People, as you can tell above, overreact to mold. If the house otherwise meets your needs, it can be remediated. Use a professional mold assessor (who doesn't do remediation) to check the house for mold. They will use multiple methods to give you a full picture of the issue (thermal cameras, air samples, surface samples), and will likely provide a remediation plan. You can then get a quote on executing that plan. It may involved ripping out drywall, demoing part of a finished basement, etc. But you can fix it and move on (assuming you find the source of water). Personally, I'd use it to buy the house at a discount given how freaked out other people get about the issue.
Nope, you sound naive. This sounds good in theory but it's very easy to miss mold if you don't tear out a lot of walls - which isn't going to happen during an inspection - and they you will be the hook if it's more mold than you think.
When this happened to us, we consulted a real estate attorney who advised us to walk away, and we did.