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Shifting into a new house can be a big adjustment for you and your family. These are the 7 tips from Haylen group to make your adjustments simple and care-free as possible.
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Before You Get Settled Into Your New Home, Make These Changes Immediately Presented By:- http://www.haylengroup.com/
Change The Locks Before moving even one tiny piece of furniture into your new home, change the locks—or at least have them rekeyed. It’s not that you don’t trust the sellers (who are, we’re sure, perfectly respectable and upstanding citizens). It’s that you shouldn’t trust everyone who’s had contact with those keys over the years, any of whom could have copied the keys for some unsavory purpose.
Change The Alarm Batteries Making sure your fire and carbon monoxide detectors have fresh batteries may not seem like a pressing issue while you’re in the middle of a stressful move (and aren’t they all), but it’s the kind of thing that gets ignored and then forgotten. Better to deal with it now, when the home is empty and you can make a quick sweep of the house—without lugging a ladder around furniture.
Review Your Home Inspector’s Report Can’t find your inspector’s report? Minto says reports are often filed with the escrow papers—but don’t wait until something goes wrong to pull them out. A good home inspector will outline the most important issues in their report, so use their expertise as a guide for your first few days of ownership. If they’ve marked anything as particularly pressing, make sure to handle it before moving in.
If you were there during inspection, you should know where your junction box is, but if you don’t, finding it “should be the first and foremost thing that should be attended to,” Minto says. During a move, when you’re plugging all sorts of electrical doodads into the wall, you don’t want to be lost in the dark hunting for that elusive metal box. (While you’re there, find the water shut-off, too.) Find The Circuit Breaker
Deal With Any Water Problems Looking at that inspector’s report? Deal with water-related issues immediately, says Minto. These tend to be troublesome because they’re so easily ignored—”out of sight, out of mind,” he says. A leaky toilet might seem minor, but the steady drip can damage internal structural components. Check your roof, too: If the rubber vent boots on your roof are leaking, you might not know it for a while. “By the time they see it in a ceiling, there’s been a fair amount of water,” Minto says.
This one isn’t mandatory, but caulking is a whole lot easier if you do it when the house is empty, letting you see all the nooks and crannies that might need a little sealing—and don’t forget the exterior. Minto says he sees caulking issues on “every home,” and while they might seem minor, it doesn’t take long before cracking gives way to leaks and even more water issues. Caulk Everything
Plan Your Emergency Exits Before you begin bringing in furniture, walk through every room and decide how you would escape in an emergency. This can help you spot problem areas or rooms that need some adjustments—say, removing bars or adding egress windows to a basement.
Contact Us • HaylenGroup Inc. • Silicon Valley (Santana Row Location) • 560 S Winchester Blvd • Suite 500 • San Jose, • CA 95128 • http://www.haylengroup.com/ • Resource:- http://goo.gl/Y7zMuX