Who pays for a pre-purchase fire escape inspection?
The buyer typically pays, since the inspection is part of buyer due diligence. In some negotiations the seller agrees to provide a recent inspection or to credit the cost.
Pre-purchase fire escape inspection
Pre-purchase due diligence on older multi-family and commercial buildings increasingly includes a fire escape inspection. Buyers and their attorneys want to know whether the fire escape has a current certification, what deficiencies exist, and what repair exposure transfers with the property. Insurance carriers writing the new policy at closing often require the certification before binding coverage. A pre-purchase inspection from ${SITE.name} answers all three questions in one report.
§·· / Schedule
Calls answered live during business hours. Written quote within one business day. We inspect, we don't sell repair work.
Mon to Fri 7 AM to 6 PM Eastern. Saturday by appointment.
${SITE.name} schedules the inspection during the due-diligence window, coordinates access with the seller or seller's agent, and delivers the report directly to the buyer (and, with permission, the buyer's attorney and lender). The report identifies current condition, documents any deficiencies with severity classifications, and provides the load test results if applicable. The buyer uses the report for negotiation, repair credit requests, or post-closing repair planning.
Most NJ commercial and multi-family transactions include a 14- to 30-day due-diligence period. ${SITE.name} schedules the on-site inspection in the first week of the window, with the report delivered in time for the buyer to use it in negotiations before the contingency expires.
Inspection access requires either the seller or the property manager to provide entry. ${SITE.name} coordinates scheduling directly with whoever the buyer designates. For tenant-occupied buildings, advance notice is typically required by NJ law.
Current condition, deficiency log with severity classifications, photographic documentation, load test results (if performed), and a written certification. The buyer can use this to request a repair credit at closing, plan post-closing capital expenditures, or — in serious cases — exit the contract within the due-diligence window.
The new insurance policy at closing typically requires evidence that the fire escape is current. The pre-purchase inspection report from ${SITE.name} is the document the carrier wants. Delivering it during due diligence prevents a last-minute underwriting problem at closing.
§·· / Intake
Send the property details and we return a written quote within one business day.
The buyer typically pays, since the inspection is part of buyer due diligence. In some negotiations the seller agrees to provide a recent inspection or to credit the cost.
Yes. ${SITE.name} schedules pre-purchase inspections within days when the timeline requires it, and reports are delivered within the standard 5- to 10-business-day turnaround — comfortably inside most 14-day windows.
Access for due-diligence inspections is typically negotiated in the contract. If the seller refuses, the buyer's attorney addresses it as a contract dispute. ${SITE.name}'s role is the inspection itself once access is granted.
Some commercial and multi-family lenders require evidence of current fire escape certification before funding, particularly on properties over 3 units. The same report serves the lender, the insurance carrier, and the buyer.
The buyer uses the report to negotiate a repair credit, require seller-side repairs before closing, or — within the due-diligence window — exit the contract. The report is the factual basis for any of those decisions.
§·· / Schedule
Calls answered live during business hours. Written quote within one business day. We inspect, we don't sell repair work.
Mon to Fri 7 AM to 6 PM Eastern. Saturday by appointment.
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