As many as one in ten home buyers didn’t take the time to carry out any checks while viewing the property they later bought, according to new research commissioned by Which?

The research questioned people who had either bought or sold a house in the past five years about the checks they’d carried out before buying a property. It found one in ten (11%) didn’t conduct any during viewings, which could potentially lead to costly maintenance issues further down the line. Even more worryingly, 5% of those questioned hadn’t viewed the property they purchased at all.

The types of checks undertaken varied greatly amongst those surveyed. Of those who did conduct viewings, most looked at whether there was any obvious damp or mould in the property (70%), the general condition of the windows (69%) and whether there were any large cracks in the walls (68%). However, fewer people checked the less obvious issues like the condition of the chimney (36%), whether light switches actually worked (35%), and if taps functioned or if there was adequate water pressure (28%).

The research also revealed that the amount of time people spent viewing a property increased with age, with those aged 18-34 viewing for only 49 minutes on average, and over 65s viewing for an average of 74 minutes. First-time buyers spent on average 53 minutes viewing their property.

Viewing for longer appeared to have an impact on the amount paid for the property, as the longer people spent viewing the more likely they were to pay less than the asking price. Of those who spent more than two hours viewing a property, 71% paid less than the asking price. In comparison, of those who spent less than 10 minutes viewing, only 48% paid below the asking price.

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