Erm "super nice" would have been to not allow it in the first place? Now it comes down to fine reasoning discernment, to reveal exactly what Kind of Liar one is dealing with, allowing one to reason a good course of action. And defeat them. ∞
I stopped watching before the 10 min mark. The issues with the doors is an indication the architect who designed the plans had no idea what he or she was doing. And in six months the home owner is absolutely going to be annoyed with doors blocking each other when one is left open. And the builder isn't fixing this because there is no fix. The design was flawed. The cracked cement is just going to get wider as the home settles. I'm can't claim to be a specialists in these things, but if you got them in your garage, you got them in the house. They are just covered up by the flooring so you won't notice them. Most likely the concrete pad was too thin or there isn't enough rebar or the consistency of the concrete was off. Hell, they may have poured the slab in the middle of winter and the ground may have been frozen so as things warmed up the house settled some cracking the concrete. This home is a hard pass. On a side note, the owner needs to plant some trees in the back yard. I can tell by the landscape that the builder brought in soil to level the lot off to ease the building construction and allow for a concrete slab. Your guess is as good as mine if the soil was compacted properly. But regardless, you need a tree line in the back and side of the lot to prevent soil erosion. I noticed all that sod. Unless this is a $750k house, builders aren't usually going to cover the cost of sod unless it is mandated by the HOA. That sod was put down probably to hide issues with water run off and soil erosion. This guy made a huge mistake buying this house. I'd give it less than five years before he does another video on why he shouldn't have bought it and bad mouthing the builder.
Gutters are required by Code where I live! Many of these would violate building codes where I live. I hope they fix all of this for you. They have a horrible reputation in our area and the houses sit and don’t sale.
@@jerfacekilla With housing prices that are even MORE prohibitve than the USA!? $2700/mo avereage rent in Vancouver? _lmao_ Japan is looking rather Wise? Less than $1000 for a nice place in Tokyo. Cananda and US have been picked clean by Investors! ∞
You can have a general inspector but you can't have a specialized inspector? I guess they don't want you to find out the truth . if they aren't interested in finding defects and fixing them before closing, good luck getting it fixed afterwards. Even If their guy really did check the roof nailing, they aren't going to say there is a problem because they don't want to rip the old roof off. Doors that hit each other? Bathroom door that hits the glass shower door? How does that happen in a Floorplan from a big builder that they use over and over and over again? So the design of the home is as problematic as the craftsmanship.
Not defending the builder, but you can find some pretty horrendous "foreman" in these cookie cutter operations. So... well, it's only mostly the builder 👷♂️
This had to be the rosiest DR Horton video I've ever seen. He's either getting paid or they know he has a UA-cam channel and are going above and beyond what they'd normally do hoping he makes more videos like this.
I don't think that is "a potential major issue"-that is a HUGE issue. NEVER accept "corporate policy"-just walk. NEVER accept the "company" specialist/inspector. I wouldn't buy because they got measurement of everything WAY off with all of the doors banging into each other.
It is obvious that DR Horton uses sub par sub contractors that lack experience, pride, knowledge, or quality in their workmanship...then the question is would you want the original sub contractors to be the ones to return to make the corrections? The contractors that allowed this type of incomplete, incorrect, and overall poor workmanship and/or design...and believe that they could be trusted and would make the right and proper corrections...that at this point in time could potentially be very costly to them...or should you buy a home from a builder that uses unqualified lowest bid sub contractors...then lacks the supervisory workforce to properly supervise those subs for quality during each phase and throughout the entire construction process...all because that could or would impact the bottom line...it is a very sad situation in so many ways...and I also believe it is also a problem that varies depending on the location...I know that some of what I've seen online from DR Horton and other national builders would most definitely not fly in my area and state...then again it is reflected in the sale price...
@@highlightsateleven5434 what are u talking about it's reflected in the price? If u think u need to pay 900k for toll bros to get quality n 400k u expect crap quality... U r stupid
Since when does a homeowner have to abide by the builder's corporate policy to dictate whom he or she can have come over and inspect their home. Be it a general contractor or a specialist?
because you don't own the home yet...and up until the signing and closing it is their property and home...it's such a ridiculous and absurd thing to dictate to the buyer that it should make you think real hard as to what the reason for that might be...
It's the american culture of low expectations and mediocrity, this would not be acceptable 50 years ago...this is why the food we eat is full of garbage chemicals, why everything we buy breaks...rich people never have to worry about any of this. It's a cardboard life, everything is rotten on the inside, but the outside looks good so it must be good right?!?
The only generous thing I can think of is he is planning on selling it. Horton homes are horrible to own long term as they basically fall apart from poor materials and construction. However get the company to fix the cosmetic damage and you could probably flip it for a profit. Especially if your not to free with just who built it.
@@SashaBlueMoon Yeah even in the cases where Horton does actually fix things, usually after massive pressure by social media stars. Your still paying for a home your barely living in due to all the construction going on to fix your home after you bought it.
I found 45 items that had to be fixed before the installation and drywall was installed on my house. Trust me, you don’t want to know what’s behind the walls that are now covered up.
Build quality on new homes over the last 10 years has dropped off a cliff with the materials being cheap and the labor putting the house together even cheaper
When your 30-40,00 craftsman short in the country, this is the kind of work you get. Time is money . Do you really think if a guy nails down on a roof knows he missed the rafter? A do you think he went back? Spend an afternoon and watch them work. I worked on a job one time the framers came back to install the hurricane clips they forgot when framing. How many of those never made it and how many got all the nails in them because they couldn't reach them? Good job taking the gutters since That's the biggest cause for water damage , bad or no gutters. No gutters on a new house? PLEASE .
@@bobainsworth5057 And check the flashings. I have seen vents, windows, and pipes that got their flashing lapped the opposite way like a mini gutter/rain catcher. Someone has to drop a hammer to teach them rainwater flows downward.
DR Horton's plumbing contractor installed all the plumbing incorrectly. We fought for years for them to fix it. We had to pay out of pocket so we could have hot and cold water correctly.
@@JimBurdan79I saw a guy to fought with them to have his home fixed. They ignored him. Up until he posted their dirty deeds on social media such as tik tok and it went viral. Soon enough Horton company responded and fixed his house
I owed a DRhorton house for about 3 years(brand new when I bought it) and I've had more issues in that house than any other house that I've ever owned. My mom recently bought one brand new last year directly across the highway from my old DR house(different neighboorhood) and it's plagued with problems too. Stay away from these builders at all costs.
Sorry to hear that, I'm about to purchase a new build in the coming months, but I'm afraid of all these problems I keep hearing about, don't know what to do.
@@JC-ms1pg get your own independent home inspection done. They are going to try to persuade you not to get one, but I’m telling you you’re better off getting one. And make them fix everything they find before you close. They will try to fight you on some of that too but they’ll eventually cave and fix it. They have been pretty good and coming back to my moms and fix the issues that arose after closing but you have to stay on top of them. We are in south Louisiana so the quality may vary by region.
Thanks for the quick reply, I intend to get an inspection, it's just a shame that homeowners have to go through this kind of thing, shelling out their hard earned money only to be faced with massive repairs on a new build, it infuriates me! @@sixsixST2
These large home builders (D.R. Horton, Lennar) pop up houses real quick & subcontract labor. These homes are flimsy at best, but shoddy work can make them more costly down the road for buyers who, past warranty period, discover issues expensive to fix out of pocket. They just don’t make quality houses anymore.
A potential home buyer is forbidden to hire a framing inspector? Corporate policy? When does a homeowner become subject to a corporate mandate? That right there, denying a potential buyer their own inspection, that is a red flag. But I understand now. Building safe and well crafted homes is apparently a violation of corporate policy.
this is the reason we didnt buy a DR Horton home here in Ft Worth...we went with a small local builder....much better built, now 9 years and no problem at all...
Them telling you that you cannot hire a framing inspector, because it is against their corporate policy... I would have told them that if they wish me to close on the home, that I will do any inspection I wish! Corporate policy isn't what I'm allowed to do by law. If I have an inspection clause in the contract, I can hire any inspectors I wish. If they don't like that, I'll see them in court. I had a builder show me plans when I bought a home, and they showed an outdoor patio area. Later they changed their mind, likely decided they could save some money, and changed their landscaping plans so I had no outdoor patio area. This home had been built on spec by the developer, so I had only a small earnest money deposit, which the contract stated I would get back if we failed to close. A week before close they told me they wouldn't be doing the patio. I said I understood, and wanted to know how much off I was going to get. They laughed and told me they could change their plans at any time. I laughed and told them I could walk away as well. I got the patio and landscaping I had understood was going to go in originally.
If your inspector can't do a pre-drywall inspection, then don't buy, period. You should actually be sending your own inspector out for every phase of the build.
I had 2 pages with every line filled out documenting an issue. I’m not an inspector and that’s just the issues I could see. Later I had plumbing, electrical, and roof/windows leaking issues that I couldn’t see until it was too late. Glad to get rid of that lemon.
My Grandfather and a neighbor built my house in 1930, using lumber from a building they tore down. It was where my Daddy was raised, later rented out, and left empty for a couple of years. Wife and I moved in in 1991. This house has survived many hurricanes, winters, and other storms. It will most likely be here long after me. It is not over insulated/sealed for energy savings. With Gulf Coast humidity, a house has to breath to prevent mold and rot. Many modern energy saving insulations make a house to air tight for this climate. Old folks knew what they were doing.
The wood we use today is inherently inferior to the wood used in the past. 80% of the old growth forests in the US are gone. Wood from older trees (couple of hundred years old) is superior to wood from younger trees.
Excellent. We decided to buy DR house today. Still and empty lot and this convinces me to get inspector prior to closing. DR is the GC but it’s the subs that build it and get it right or wrong.
Don't sign anything if it says you have to close by a certain date and if you don't close you will have to pay per day. They won't fix anything you point out at the walk though but you will still HAVE to close.
It may be too late, but get an inspection before insulation and drywall go up, that finds structure issues before they are covered up. This is the cheapest time for both you and the builder to fix these issues.
Don’t do it, run. Read your contract carefully and I guarantee you it will state that you cannot sue them for anything. You can only use arbitration. That is a huge red flag.
3:19 water penetrating the siding will flow to that ledge. Sealing with Caulk may channel water toward the house. Careful about caulking around windows as well, water needs a place to escape.
@@MoneyHungryPicker I've seen a lot of homes like this that is not caulked. I think the most important thing is to make sure you have a slope on the bricks so water can flow away instead of towards the wall.
I built a house in 1995 and the build quality even then was at best mediocre If they misses all these cosmetic issues and doors hit other doors, I would be terrified of what is lurking behind the walls
It's not just DR Horton, it's most builders. I think so much falls on the specific community you are looking at, the subcontractors they are using, the construction manager and the project manager. If the construction manager is cutting corners and using cheap materials and using the cheapest sub contractors to get it up as quick as possible and the project manager is just worried about time, you will have issues. I bought a DR Horton townhome back in 2009 and had no problems but some of my neighbors said they had problems. I think that had to do with different phases and using different subcontractors. The thing is, as a buyer, you have no transparency into what is going on behind the scenes. Your best recourse is to hire your own home inspector but they won't catch everything either and if it's already sheetrocked, the inspector won't see anything that is messed up behind the walls but always hire your own independent home inspector.
DR Horton built my new home in South Carolina. You said the truth about DR Horton using inexpensive contractors, cheap materials, and superintendents that were not qualified. It took 1 1/2 years of fighting to get 73 issues resolved. New home owners must document every construction issue and bring these issues to the builder immediately. In conclusion, it's the workers that are skilled or not and the superintendent for DR Horton that determines the quality of your home. Good Luck
@@jdos5643let them frown, it's your right. You can get inspection, ( private), a each phase. If they won't let you , dont buy house. I was looking at a house that had the door and stairs to basement in a narrow hall. I asked them to move it 4' to the garage so i would be able to get sheet rock down there, and they refused. I walked out. I'm spending hundreds of thousands of dollars and they cant ove a door? They didn't even offer to do it for a price.
@@jdos5643 Once again, it depends on the community. they encouraged me to select my own inspector. Also, I live in Texas. I have heard stories that they probably build higher quality homes in Texas because they are based there. I don't know how true that is though.
These aren't one-off mistakes. These are indicative of systemic failures in craftmanship and quality. I would be worried about what else starts popping up after living in it for a while. It would be a hard pass from me.
So glad you put this out before buying. Look at home inspector channels. You dodged the bullet. According to them these developers are horrible. All they care about is you getting the loan. And currently, there are no lemon laws on banks giving loans on these lemons.
Hey great informative video! It's been 4 months since you posted this video, how are things going? I will say all those nails that missed the wood were disturbing! I've heard so many horror stories about these builders, I'm in the process of selling my home and buying a new build, but I have concerns about quality issues. Hope your new home is working out.
Run buddy, run! Once they have the dough you have little leverage. "Cosmetic things" are critical to the next buyer. Hold their feet to the fire. Do they do a moisture test before applying the wall linings?
I'm also a Horton customer! In fact, in the matter of house construction, there are always a few aspects related to: Materials - cheap, low-cost materials will quickly fail later! (cheap home) Managers, subcontractors, and workers in order of preference. Comes from the worker - there will be one person or another, some people with weak skills, some with good skills - a problem with weak skills (weak skills and cheap labor costs) But on the worker is the manager - is the subcontractor - if the subcontractor gets cheap and the subcontractor team is not good, it can't do better. Higher than the subcontractor is Horton's general management team - if the management team is good (the salary is also high) and responsible, they will never neglect and ignore the mistakes - petty mistakes that ruin project value!!!!
@@highlightsateleven5434 They may be good at management, they may be good at making a profit - but the management of construction quality really needs someone who is good at the profession and always closely monitors the quality of the construction (the best quality with the money spent), requiring standard operations for each job - they really lack managers like that!
Wait - You had to pay extra for gutters? Is that a regional thing, or part of DR Horton's requirements? Just wondering... Also, I'd really be concerned about those nails not going into the trusses properly. That looks like a major structural defect to me. As you said, you're going to hire your own framing engineer to inspect it, but I'd press them on getting that person in before you close. I've read that they don't really honor their warranties. Best of luck, and hopefully, they can get the issues fixed!
I grew up in an area that had terrible soil shifting. And this is a brand new home, and I guarantee you are going to have foundation problems with all the cracks in the concrete in the garage and the patio. It’ll just simply spread to the rest of the house.
So ugly that they chop down EVERY TREE to build those cheap cookie cutter houses. Pure laziness to cut all the trees down just so builders don’t have to work around them.
Mine in 1998, slab cement was crooked in kitchen, no insulation in attic,water softener drain pipe not down drain stack, flooded laundry room on first regen. Drywall texture bad, painted over all,the dust on base boards. Boot print in concrete by front door. Pocket door installed crooked,wrong kitchen cabinets.lots of concrete cracks exposed when new flooring installed. Neighbor behind water floods into my yard under crappy block,wall. Wind blew over their wall.
Those are smart light switches you do not want to caulk around them you need to be able to take off the cover. The gaps in the shower do not caulk those either those are like weep holes in case you were to get water behind your tile it won’t cause mold.
Concrete will crack… But the real question is why did this new concrete crack so early?? Another big issue!! I see this happen too often and it never ends well.
I'm not a homeowner so I'm just curious - why would someone want to buy a house after seeing many things weren't installed correctly. Are Dr horton homes a fraction of the price of well built houses?
They tend to be lower in price especially these days. Customs homes are ridiculously expensive. Most things wrong with my house were minor and all got fixed. So far so good.
Young man you said can still get out of this deal per inspection? You had SOO many issues I think I'd run like Warnar Bros Roadrunner. Beep Beep, puff of dust!!!!
The dryer vent box is supposed to be down to floor level per the manufacturer instructions. Having the dryer vent box higher will cause your flex hose to have an extra bend which will restrict the exhaust air flow and other issues.
@@beekind6267 Ain't nothin' _"common"_ 'bout it these daze Sista! It's like going on a first date with someone who doesn't bother with their dentures. Unless they have a compelling backstory (e.g. they are hungover, or they are feeling Nihilistic,) why in the WORLD would one consdier a relationship? No judgement necessary. Mere Prudence. Or Common Sense I suppose? ∞
Guy claims to have looked into DR horton and waves away all online complaints. Inspects his house and finds numerous problems and still believes that the company will fix them and honor their 1 year warranty. Did he not see the countless post of the company denying claims and dragging their feet to fix things? Never mind most the things he claims need fixed are pretty major projects, not something you could live in the house while they are doing. And as always the more simple things you find wrong visible from the surface of a new home the more I worry about what is going on behind the walls.
Your concern with the nailing of the OSB board, it is possible at the time of nailing the OSB to the truss the worker did notice the nails were missing and re-nailed it again into the truss. The other problem is the nails that are missed and not nailed into the truss will work themselves back up and raise the roofing shingle and could damage the roof felt and shingle and cause a leak.
No, no, the closer you got the worse it looked as for doors hitting each other as a joiner in UK I'd be sacked. That's just bad framing. Makes me wonder what's hiding behind the drywall, floor's etc.😢😂
The roofing nails missing the truss is very common, and the way the roofing supervisor checked to verify the OSB was secured is valid. Your reasoning for moving forward is spot on. Once you own the home you can have a trusted specialist check out the framing, cornice, and roofing. The closet issue, I would make them fix before closing. It will be about week or so repair if they have the carpet on hand.
I just can't believe that you would consider evening going ahead with the purchase of the new home ,when the nail are sticking through the ceiling of your home along with the other issues !!! I would never ever believe and take the word of an employee (the structure/ framing manager ) because he is an employee and his loyalty is with D.R.Horton period !!! Furthermore ,D.R.Horton ,along with a few other major new home builders ,have very negative reviews and reputation of very shoddy workmanship in their new homes and very poor customer service !!!.
I’m one year in. There isn’t a square foot of the walls that don’t have some sort of small debris. I tried to bring this up, vigorously, and the site manager said he can’t babysit the painters. I was so disheartened, still am every time I look at a wall. With the market the way it was, and my situation, I caved. There are other cosmetic issues too. Your video gave me some things on the outside to look for. How has your experience been since?
The crew that build the first few houses are the most qualified crew afforded to the project. They would come to build the model and a couple of each elevation/trim from the catalog. Then, the cheaper crew would come and get the rest done like cloning boxes. There are no need to measure anything anymore since everything, on paper, is supposed to be pre measured and counted. That's why if a mistake occurs, the solution is to add cosmetic wedges and shims to pass inspection...if any, since your building material is already allocated. So, buying inventory house is only good if you are one of the first 10 buyers of the community. Otherwise, you are gambling on the quality since everything has been covered up when they stick the FOR SALE sign.
Honestly man, the problem isn't what you can see but what's hidden behind walls or from view. Getting a private inspector to oversee the different development stages of the home being built is crucial because these homemaking companies don't care about anything but building fast and selling quick. Remember that homes are built by a general contractor, not a house building company. Just spending the extra money to oversee a house being built right can save you a lot more money down the road when more serious problems start occurring.
Isn’t DR Horton one of the builders that won’t allow inspectors to go on the roof or in the attic? I also think they require you to have one of their reps accompany the inspector.
It's always good to have a third party. Frame and inspector come out to confirm. You should've never closed on this house and ran what were you thinking? This was 11 months ago. What else have you discovered? Are they returning your calls?
I am about to do a 1 year update video. So far I guess I got lucky. No major issues and all issues I had prior to closing and after closing was resolved in 48 hours.
I’m a Director of Quality/Warranty and I implemented a quality inspection one week prior to NHO so that way it gives builders two weeks to fix issues. This house is horrible and wouldn’t pass our inspection and would not close.
With all of those "minor" issues I would be concerned with the overall quality. A builder/craftsman that would overlook some of those issues would also "overlook" or just simply ignore other issues. And it seems obvious they rushed through this build. And they wouldn't allow you to bring a specialist in to give you an opinion? BS!! Corporate policy? Yeah right. That would also be a clue that they do crappy work.
@@flyingburritobro68 so quick? Who knows what missing in concealment. Prob no rebar on that cracked patio. Having to tear closer out and rebuild door ways. “Just minor stuff” 😂
One issue is that the mulch in the front of the house is too high. There should be 6' of exposed concrete below the brick so you can identify any termite tunnels built. The side and back were fine in that regard, but something to monitor.
I'm looking at a DR Horton home, and noticed the siding has dents/dibs where they meet do you know if that's something that's done? Similar to that flashing where it's puzzled together but no caulking in between. Thanks for the video, that lot is for sure great!
Do you not walk, run from Horton. Look at your contract that states you cannot sue them. You have to go and arbitrate. That’s a huge red flag. Do you more research do not buy anything from them. They will promise the world until you close and then you’re screwed because they will not honor any part of their warranty and you will not be able to sue them.
Imagine buying any other product, esp at the price point of a house, and having to hire your own person to QA it because you can't trust the company to build it right themselves.
I cant comprehend gutters being considered an 'option', you may as well have the slab and windows as an option because both will perish inside 5 years without gutters. The fact that the down-pipes aren't plumbed to a stormwater system is insane for a similar reason, it's going to turn the soil under the slab to muddy slush, inviting black mold, timber rot and slab subsidence. Also the gaps around windows, wall joints and eave trim joints are NOT 'just cosmetic', anything that allows ingress of water inside the walls or attic; is structural. Even if the roofing supervisor wasn't lying about the boards, (which I highly doubt), the free hanging nails will create increasingly larger holes as normal movement occurs, allowing rain to penetrate into the attic. Run; away.
Love these videos. I do however feel like any crack in concrete they should fix if it's before you move in. And the doors should be made where they don't hit other doors. I don't feel like that's too much to ask when you are shelling out all this cash for a new home 😮
They will b super nice until a few months after u close on the house.
Erm "super nice" would have been to not allow it in the first place? Now it comes down to fine reasoning discernment, to reveal exactly what Kind of Liar one is dealing with, allowing one to reason a good course of action. And defeat them. ∞
Run!
One would be crazy to buy this home.
Why
@@productive23 Too little for way too much $$$
@@productive23 Watch the video he points out a ton of stuff.
It's literal trash @@productive23
I stopped watching before the 10 min mark. The issues with the doors is an indication the architect who designed the plans had no idea what he or she was doing. And in six months the home owner is absolutely going to be annoyed with doors blocking each other when one is left open. And the builder isn't fixing this because there is no fix. The design was flawed.
The cracked cement is just going to get wider as the home settles. I'm can't claim to be a specialists in these things, but if you got them in your garage, you got them in the house. They are just covered up by the flooring so you won't notice them. Most likely the concrete pad was too thin or there isn't enough rebar or the consistency of the concrete was off. Hell, they may have poured the slab in the middle of winter and the ground may have been frozen so as things warmed up the house settled some cracking the concrete.
This home is a hard pass. On a side note, the owner needs to plant some trees in the back yard. I can tell by the landscape that the builder brought in soil to level the lot off to ease the building construction and allow for a concrete slab. Your guess is as good as mine if the soil was compacted properly. But regardless, you need a tree line in the back and side of the lot to prevent soil erosion. I noticed all that sod. Unless this is a $750k house, builders aren't usually going to cover the cost of sod unless it is mandated by the HOA. That sod was put down probably to hide issues with water run off and soil erosion.
This guy made a huge mistake buying this house. I'd give it less than five years before he does another video on why he shouldn't have bought it and bad mouthing the builder.
You're a very forgiving guy, my dude. Where I live, this shoddy construction would never fly.
Hell they’re all built like that!
Gutters are required by Code where I live! Many of these would violate building codes where I live. I hope they fix all of this for you. They have a horrible reputation in our area and the houses sit and don’t sale.
Where you live? _UTOPIA?_
@@youbetyourwrasse Yes, CANADA ... which compared to the USA, it is utopia.
@@jerfacekilla With housing prices that are even MORE prohibitve than the USA!? $2700/mo avereage rent in Vancouver? _lmao_ Japan is looking rather Wise? Less than $1000 for a nice place in Tokyo. Cananda and US have been picked clean by Investors! ∞
You can have a general inspector but you can't have a specialized inspector? I guess they don't want you to find out the truth . if they aren't interested in finding defects and fixing them before closing, good luck getting it fixed afterwards. Even If their guy really did check the roof nailing, they aren't going to say there is a problem because they don't want to rip the old roof off. Doors that hit each other? Bathroom door that hits the glass shower door? How does that happen in a Floorplan from a big builder that they use over and over and over again? So the design of the home is as problematic as the craftsmanship.
Not defending the builder, but you can find some pretty horrendous "foreman" in these cookie cutter operations. So... well, it's only mostly the builder 👷♂️
@@MAWA-Vik19DR Horton has a history of shady builds and not following thru on fixing issues.
When a company won't let you bring in your own spealist, it's a red flag, DO NOT BUY
Agreed 100%!
Right, WE'RE ALLLL TRYING TO GIVE HIM GOOD ADVICE. 🐎. HE NEEDS TO RUN IMMEDIATELY 🏃♀️🏃♀️🏃♀️🏃♀️
Dude - I think you're making a big mistake. Walk away while you still can!
This had to be the rosiest DR Horton video I've ever seen. He's either getting paid or they know he has a UA-cam channel and are going above and beyond what they'd normally do hoping he makes more videos like this.
No run away man 👻🤪
If I saw those nails that could have been corrected I’d run away it shows no one looked or checked unbelievable and disgusting 👎🏾👎🏾👎🏾
@@donackerson5194 Agreed ...how can u be this passive with these issues on such a big investment...unless he just doesn’t GAF🤦🏻♂️.
Sad, they're all like that.
I don't think that is "a potential major issue"-that is a HUGE issue. NEVER accept "corporate policy"-just walk. NEVER accept the "company" specialist/inspector. I wouldn't buy because they got measurement of everything WAY off with all of the doors banging into each other.
Are u going to walk from your deposit?
It is obvious that DR Horton uses sub par sub contractors that lack experience, pride, knowledge, or quality in their workmanship...then the question is would you want the original sub contractors to be the ones to return to make the corrections? The contractors that allowed this type of incomplete, incorrect, and overall poor workmanship and/or design...and believe that they could be trusted and would make the right and proper corrections...that at this point in time could potentially be very costly to them...or should you buy a home from a builder that uses unqualified lowest bid sub contractors...then lacks the supervisory workforce to properly supervise those subs for quality during each phase and throughout the entire construction process...all because that could or would impact the bottom line...it is a very sad situation in so many ways...and I also believe it is also a problem that varies depending on the location...I know that some of what I've seen online from DR Horton and other national builders would most definitely not fly in my area and state...then again it is reflected in the sale price...
@@highlightsateleven5434 what are u talking about it's reflected in the price? If u think u need to pay 900k for toll bros to get quality n 400k u expect crap quality... U r stupid
@@danman1287no deposit should ever have been given.
Since when does a homeowner have to abide by the builder's corporate policy to dictate whom he or she can have come over and inspect their home. Be it a general contractor or a specialist?
because you don't own the home yet...and up until the signing and closing it is their property and home...it's such a ridiculous and absurd thing to dictate to the buyer that it should make you think real hard as to what the reason for that might be...
This video demonstrates toxic optimism; hiding behind the toxic optimism is the toxic mold.
😂
It's the american culture of low expectations and mediocrity, this would not be acceptable 50 years ago...this is why the food we eat is full of garbage chemicals, why everything we buy breaks...rich people never have to worry about any of this. It's a cardboard life, everything is rotten on the inside, but the outside looks good so it must be good right?!?
The only generous thing I can think of is he is planning on selling it. Horton homes are horrible to own long term as they basically fall apart from poor materials and construction. However get the company to fix the cosmetic damage and you could probably flip it for a profit. Especially if your not to free with just who built it.
This guy could spin cancer as a good thing.. "Well I got cancer but the good thing is I get to visit the hospital every week!"
@@SashaBlueMoon Yeah even in the cases where Horton does actually fix things, usually after massive pressure by social media stars. Your still paying for a home your barely living in due to all the construction going on to fix your home after you bought it.
I found 45 items that had to be fixed before the installation and drywall was installed on my house. Trust me, you don’t want to know what’s behind the walls that are now covered up.
What is?
@@jdos5643insulation
@@barpatron it's Carrot Top.
He tried to warn you...
Let me guess, Modelo and Corona bottles
@@csmlouis in my experience it is domestic beers that are more likely to become house deposits, models and Coronas end up in the trash can
A home inspector can only find so much...the biggest problems are 7 yrs down the line...
'the biggest problems are 7 yrs down the line...'. That will be when the cardboard that DR Horton used instead of OSB finally crumbles.
Exactly!!!
Build quality on new homes over the last 10 years has dropped off a cliff with the materials being cheap and the labor putting the house together even cheaper
Their corruption will catch up to them.
But yet the prices are continuously going up.
When your 30-40,00 craftsman short in the country, this is the kind of work you get. Time is money . Do you really think if a guy nails down on a roof knows he missed the rafter? A do you think he went back?
Spend an afternoon and watch them work. I worked on a job one time the framers came back to install the hurricane clips they forgot when framing. How many of those never made it and how many got all the nails in them because they couldn't reach them?
Good job taking the gutters since That's the biggest cause for water damage , bad or no gutters. No gutters on a new house? PLEASE .
No habla Español
@@bobainsworth5057 And check the flashings. I have seen vents, windows, and pipes that got their flashing lapped the opposite way like a mini gutter/rain catcher. Someone has to drop a hammer to teach them rainwater flows downward.
im a 23 year Texas home inspector... I see this stuff all the time. they all use the cheapest labor.
DR Horton's plumbing contractor installed all the plumbing incorrectly. We fought for years for them to fix it. We had to pay out of pocket so we could have hot and cold water correctly.
@@JimBurdan79I saw a guy to fought with them to have his home fixed. They ignored him. Up until he posted their dirty deeds on social media such as tik tok and it went viral. Soon enough Horton company responded and fixed his house
I owed a DRhorton house for about 3 years(brand new when I bought it) and I've had more issues in that house than any other house that I've ever owned. My mom recently bought one brand new last year directly across the highway from my old DR house(different neighboorhood) and it's plagued with problems too. Stay away from these builders at all costs.
Sorry to hear that, I'm about to purchase a new build in the coming months, but I'm afraid of all these problems I keep hearing about, don't know what to do.
@@JC-ms1pg get your own independent home inspection done. They are going to try to persuade you not to get one, but I’m telling you you’re better off getting one. And make them fix everything they find before you close. They will try to fight you on some of that too but they’ll eventually cave and fix it. They have been pretty good and coming back to my moms and fix the issues that arose after closing but you have to stay on top of them. We are in south Louisiana so the quality may vary by region.
Thanks for the quick reply, I intend to get an inspection, it's just a shame that homeowners have to go through this kind of thing, shelling out their hard earned money only to be faced with massive repairs on a new build, it infuriates me!
@@sixsixST2
🏃 don’t buy DRHorror
@@Psalm91-x8q'I won't buy' . . .
These large home builders (D.R. Horton, Lennar) pop up houses real quick & subcontract labor. These homes are flimsy at best, but shoddy work can make them more costly down the road for buyers who, past warranty period, discover issues expensive to fix out of pocket. They just don’t make quality houses anymore.
A potential home buyer is forbidden to hire a framing inspector? Corporate policy? When does a homeowner become subject to a corporate mandate? That right there, denying a potential buyer their own inspection, that is a red flag. But I understand now. Building safe and well crafted homes is apparently a violation of corporate policy.
this is the reason we didnt buy a DR Horton home here in Ft Worth...we went with a small local builder....much better built, now 9 years and no problem at all...
How could you get 4 bedrooms in a 1500 sq. house? I have a 1600 sq. house with 3 bedrooms and the bedrooms are way to small.
Rooms are small and the 4th room is more of an office as opposed to a bedroom but it still qualifies as a bedroom
I didn't mean to sound rude but I wish I would have bought the next size bigger house for that reason. Thanks.@@MoneyHungryPicker
Yeah that is alarming in itself. My townhouse in dallas is 1515 sq and its a two bedroom
Live like the rest of the western world, hey it maybe good to be close enough to talk to your kids before they follow the internet dads advise.
Them telling you that you cannot hire a framing inspector, because it is against their corporate policy... I would have told them that if they wish me to close on the home, that I will do any inspection I wish! Corporate policy isn't what I'm allowed to do by law. If I have an inspection clause in the contract, I can hire any inspectors I wish. If they don't like that, I'll see them in court. I had a builder show me plans when I bought a home, and they showed an outdoor patio area. Later they changed their mind, likely decided they could save some money, and changed their landscaping plans so I had no outdoor patio area. This home had been built on spec by the developer, so I had only a small earnest money deposit, which the contract stated I would get back if we failed to close. A week before close they told me they wouldn't be doing the patio. I said I understood, and wanted to know how much off I was going to get. They laughed and told me they could change their plans at any time. I laughed and told them I could walk away as well. I got the patio and landscaping I had understood was going to go in originally.
If your inspector can't do a pre-drywall inspection, then don't buy, period. You should actually be sending your own inspector out for every phase of the build.
I had 2 pages with every line filled out documenting an issue. I’m not an inspector and that’s just the issues I could see. Later I had plumbing, electrical, and roof/windows leaking issues that I couldn’t see until it was too late. Glad to get rid of that lemon.
Bought a DR Horton home once in Frisco TX. Never again.
I flipped a lot of homes in Vegas ... Dr Horton had the worst construction... 2nd FL was not planed
Nice area for DR Horton.
My Grandfather and a neighbor built my house in 1930, using lumber from a building they tore down. It was where my Daddy was raised, later rented out, and left empty for a couple of years. Wife and I moved in in 1991. This house has survived many hurricanes, winters, and other storms. It will most likely be here long after me. It is not over insulated/sealed for energy savings. With Gulf Coast humidity, a house has to breath to prevent mold and rot. Many modern energy saving insulations make a house to air tight for this climate. Old folks knew what they were doing.
I couldn’t agree more! Those old folks definitely built houses to last!
The wood we use today is inherently inferior to the wood used in the past. 80% of the old growth forests in the US are gone. Wood from older trees (couple of hundred years old) is superior to wood from younger trees.
I live in a 1950s Fox and Jacobs home made from American sweat and cedar. No issues.
Good luck getting them to fix anything after settlement.
They have fixed everything post closing within 48 hours.
@@MoneyHungryPicker that is great. Bet your video helped. Congratulations on your new home!
Wow, that inspector was super thorough! Good on him!
Before making a deal for new construction, is it proper to ask the builder for a list of their subcontractors so the buyer can check them out?
lol
Excellent. We decided to buy DR house today. Still and empty lot and this convinces me to get inspector prior to closing. DR is the GC but it’s the subs that build it and get it right or wrong.
Definitely get a home inspector, new or existing, things can be missed all the time, the more eyes on it the better
Don't sign anything if it says you have to close by a certain date and if you don't close you will have to pay per day. They won't fix anything you point out at the walk though but you will still HAVE to close.
It may be too late, but get an inspection before insulation and drywall go up, that finds structure issues before they are covered up. This is the cheapest time for both you and the builder to fix these issues.
Don’t do it, run. Read your contract carefully and I guarantee you it will state that you cannot sue them for anything. You can only use arbitration. That is a huge red flag.
Everything I'm reading says if you go with Horton get inspection at EVERY stage from slab up and you will do much better.
3:19 water penetrating the siding will flow to that ledge. Sealing with Caulk may channel water toward the house. Careful about caulking around windows as well, water needs a place to escape.
Yes thank you. We decided not to caulk that area
@@MoneyHungryPicker I've seen a lot of homes like this that is not caulked. I think the most important thing is to make sure you have a slope on the bricks so water can flow away instead of towards the wall.
I’ll tell you what an old school painter said to us. Don’t over caulk. This was in the late 60s. He said houses have to breathe.
10 years ago bought a D R Horton home. Lots of issues. The main one being not enough attic ventilation leading to attic mold.
Drill some holes and remove sone insulation easy fix.
I have a DR Horton home in Ga I’ve lived in for 22 years. Outside of normal wear and tear we haven’t had severe issues knock on wood!
Yeah, they had a good reputation before they expanded so much.
That’s wonderful!! ❤
The good old days, China was our friend back then.
I built a house in 1995 and the build quality even then was at best mediocre
If they misses all these cosmetic issues and doors hit other doors, I would be terrified of what is lurking behind the walls
Thank you for your very thorough review. I've come upon some new builds and did a quick internet search and found mixed results.
Red flags galore.
It's not just DR Horton, it's most builders. I think so much falls on the specific community you are looking at, the subcontractors they are using, the construction manager and the project manager. If the construction manager is cutting corners and using cheap materials and using the cheapest sub contractors to get it up as quick as possible and the project manager is just worried about time, you will have issues.
I bought a DR Horton townhome back in 2009 and had no problems but some of my neighbors said they had problems. I think that had to do with different phases and using different subcontractors. The thing is, as a buyer, you have no transparency into what is going on behind the scenes. Your best recourse is to hire your own home inspector but they won't catch everything either and if it's already sheetrocked, the inspector won't see anything that is messed up behind the walls but always hire your own independent home inspector.
DR Horton built my new home in South Carolina. You said the truth about DR Horton using inexpensive contractors, cheap materials, and superintendents that were not qualified. It took 1 1/2 years of fighting to get 73 issues resolved. New home owners must document every construction issue and bring these issues to the builder immediately. In conclusion, it's the workers that are skilled or not and the superintendent for DR Horton that determines the quality of your home. Good Luck
Private inspectors usually know what to look for in home building. But Horton frowns upon ppl hiring their own inspectors.
@@jdos5643let them frown, it's your right. You can get inspection, ( private), a each phase. If they won't let you , dont buy house. I was looking at a house that had the door and stairs to basement in a narrow hall. I asked them to move it 4' to the garage so i would be able to get sheet rock down there, and they refused. I walked out. I'm spending hundreds of thousands of dollars and they cant ove a door? They didn't even offer to do it for a price.
You are foolish to buy this home, you will regret it!
@@jdos5643 Once again, it depends on the community. they encouraged me to select my own inspector. Also, I live in Texas. I have heard stories that they probably build higher quality homes in Texas because they are based there. I don't know how true that is though.
These aren't one-off mistakes. These are indicative of systemic failures in craftmanship and quality. I would be worried about what else starts popping up after living in it for a while. It would be a hard pass from me.
I would have walked away terrible job what will happen after warranty ?
He won’t have to worry about the warranty because they will not honor it anyway. Trust me, I know for a fact.
Just walk away….after you slam that door into the glass shower door. Hahaha
Dude that attic is a flat out no go
He'd better hope no thunderstorms hit, let alone a tornado. The roof will go flying.
He is much too calm about this
You'll be sorry soon.
So glad you put this out before buying. Look at home inspector channels. You dodged the bullet. According to them these developers are horrible. All they care about is you getting the loan. And currently, there are no lemon laws on banks giving loans on these lemons.
Thanks for this video. I plan to buy A DR Home too. No homebuilder will be perfect all we can do is do our best due dilligence.
Hey great informative video! It's been 4 months since you posted this video, how are things going? I will say all those nails that missed the wood were disturbing! I've heard so many horror stories about these builders, I'm in the process of selling my home and buying a new build, but I have concerns about quality issues. Hope your new home is working out.
So far so good. Only a few minor things and they all been fixed by DR Horton.
Run buddy, run! Once they have the dough you have little leverage. "Cosmetic things" are critical to the next buyer. Hold their feet to the fire. Do they do a moisture test before applying the wall linings?
I don’t know what you ultimately decided on, but I hope for your sake you ran and didn’t look back about buying this home.
No such thing as a "really good built" DR Horton home.
I'm also a Horton customer!
In fact, in the matter of house construction, there are always a few aspects related to:
Materials - cheap, low-cost materials will quickly fail later! (cheap home)
Managers, subcontractors, and workers in order of preference.
Comes from the worker - there will be one person or another, some people with weak skills, some with good skills - a problem with weak skills (weak skills and cheap labor costs)
But on the worker is the manager - is the subcontractor - if the subcontractor gets cheap and the subcontractor team is not good, it can't do better.
Higher than the subcontractor is Horton's general management team - if the management team is good (the salary is also high) and responsible, they will never neglect and ignore the mistakes - petty mistakes that ruin project value!!!!
DR Horton's management/superintendents may be good and qualified but there aren't enough of them to supervise their builds properly and timely...
@@highlightsateleven5434 They may be good at management, they may be good at making a profit - but the management of construction quality really needs someone who is good at the profession and always closely monitors the quality of the construction (the best quality with the money spent), requiring standard operations for each job - they really lack managers like that!
Again if they leave obvious things undone or half-assed what things were unable to be observed.
Wait - You had to pay extra for gutters? Is that a regional thing, or part of DR Horton's requirements? Just wondering... Also, I'd really be concerned about those nails not going into the trusses properly. That looks like a major structural defect to me. As you said, you're going to hire your own framing engineer to inspect it, but I'd press them on getting that person in before you close. I've read that they don't really honor their warranties. Best of luck, and hopefully, they can get the issues fixed!
They won hundred percent do not honor their warranties and you cannot sue them. It’s in the contract.
I don't know anything about DR Horton but I know fast and dirty construction when I see it.
This makes you appreciate the 100 yr old houses that just need a renovation & updating. I didn't know new construction was THAT BAD!!
No control joints in concrete. The patio and garage should have some saw cuts to prevent cracks wondering all over.
I grew up in an area that had terrible soil shifting. And this is a brand new home, and I guarantee you are going to have foundation problems with all the cracks in the concrete in the garage and the patio. It’ll just simply spread to the rest of the house.
So ugly that they chop down EVERY TREE to build those cheap cookie cutter houses. Pure laziness to cut all the trees down just so builders don’t have to work around them.
Might be a safety and maneuverability thing.
Why wouldn't someone inspect the attic before putting down shingles? Did they rip the shingles off and repair the missed nails? Please say yes!
Mine in 1998, slab cement was crooked in kitchen, no insulation in attic,water softener drain pipe not down drain stack, flooded laundry room on first regen. Drywall texture bad, painted over all,the dust on base boards. Boot print in concrete by front door. Pocket door installed crooked,wrong kitchen cabinets.lots of concrete cracks exposed when new flooring installed. Neighbor behind water floods into my yard under crappy block,wall. Wind blew over their wall.
Those are smart light switches you do not want to caulk around them you need to be able to take off the cover. The gaps in the shower do not caulk those either those are like weep holes in case you were to get water behind your tile it won’t cause mold.
I’ve never heard someone caulking light switch covers. I guess the only time you do is if the wall isn’t flat from shoddy sheetrock installers.
Yes. Those holes only allow water out. Never in.
Also. How big are your clown shoes?
Hope you buy it and give us updates
Yes. About to make 1 year follow up video. Stay turned
Concrete will crack… But the real question is why did this new concrete crack so early?? Another big issue!! I see this happen too often and it never ends well.
How are gutters an option? Those are necessary.
No, Ashton Woods said the same.
About to make a DR purchase in Arkansas. Thanks for your videos!
Welcome to Doctor Horton Construction Techniques and Cheap Materials and Labor costs.
🎉🎉🎉 I will never purchase a DR HORTON Home. Too many complaints and not enough answers. Good luck everyone. Blessings,Carlos ✝️🙏❤️😊🇺🇸
I'm not a homeowner so I'm just curious - why would someone want to buy a house after seeing many things weren't installed correctly. Are Dr horton homes a fraction of the price of well built houses?
They tend to be lower in price especially these days. Customs homes are ridiculously expensive. Most things wrong with my house were minor and all got fixed. So far so good.
Wow! Good video! So did your inspector say the cracks in the cement slab is not affecting the home structure? That was ok?
Yes. He said 99% of concrete cracks and he was not worried about it. So far so good!
Young man you said can still get out of this deal per inspection? You had SOO many issues I think I'd run like Warnar Bros Roadrunner. Beep Beep, puff of dust!!!!
When are we getting the review of the 6 month review and living in the house?
Will try to make update video soon. So far everything is great! Only a few small issue all fixed by DR Horton quickly!
Btw, warrantees are only as good as the company, who says they have to come out quickly to fix something, could be 6 months if they feel like it
Please tell me that you did not purchase this house! PLEASE!
I did and believe it or not I am beyond happy. DR Horton has fixed any repair tickets I put in within 24 hours. Maybe I got lucky?
You're lucky that's all you got. Trust me I've seen a lot worse than thatI have been in new construction for a little over 8 years N.W.FL .
The dryer vent box is supposed to be down to floor level per the manufacturer instructions. Having the dryer vent box higher will cause your flex hose to have an extra bend which will restrict the exhaust air flow and other issues.
Rebuild the closet to the size it should have been?
I dont think i would buy this home. Shouldnt all those things already be fixed? 🤔
_Grasshoper, you see and are wise. You are wise and see, Grasshopper._ #forwearebecomingasgods
@youbetyourwrasse 🤣🤣🤣🤣
That's not wise. That's common sense. 🤣🤣
@@beekind6267 Ain't nothin' _"common"_ 'bout it these daze Sista! It's like going on a first date with someone who doesn't bother with their dentures. Unless they have a compelling backstory (e.g. they are hungover, or they are feeling Nihilistic,) why in the WORLD would one consdier a relationship? No judgement necessary. Mere Prudence. Or Common Sense I suppose? ∞
Guy claims to have looked into DR horton and waves away all online complaints. Inspects his house and finds numerous problems and still believes that the company will fix them and honor their 1 year warranty. Did he not see the countless post of the company denying claims and dragging their feet to fix things? Never mind most the things he claims need fixed are pretty major projects, not something you could live in the house while they are doing. And as always the more simple things you find wrong visible from the surface of a new home the more I worry about what is going on behind the walls.
What kind of roof sheathing is that?
Your concern with the nailing of the OSB board, it is possible at the time of nailing the OSB to the truss the worker did notice the nails were missing and re-nailed it again into the truss. The other problem is the nails that are missed and not nailed into the truss will work themselves back up and raise the roofing shingle and could damage the roof felt and shingle and cause a leak.
No, no, the closer you got the worse it looked as for doors hitting each other as a joiner in UK I'd be sacked. That's just bad framing. Makes me wonder what's hiding behind the drywall, floor's etc.😢😂
The roofing nails missing the truss is very common, and the way the roofing supervisor checked to verify the OSB was secured is valid. Your reasoning for moving forward is spot on. Once you own the home you can have a trusted specialist check out the framing, cornice, and roofing.
The closet issue, I would make them fix before closing. It will be about week or so repair if they have the carpet on hand.
I just can't believe that you would consider evening going ahead with the purchase of the new home ,when the nail are sticking through the ceiling of your home along with the other issues !!!
I would never ever believe and take the word of an employee (the structure/ framing manager ) because he is an employee and his loyalty is with D.R.Horton period !!!
Furthermore ,D.R.Horton ,along with a few other major new home builders ,have very negative reviews and reputation of very shoddy workmanship in their new homes and very poor customer service !!!.
Westport homes are the same way - its amazing to see how they dont hold up over time.
Caulk on the bathroom light switch? Why would there ever be a gap large enough to need to caulk a light switch.
I’m one year in. There isn’t a square foot of the walls that don’t have some sort of small debris. I tried to bring this up, vigorously, and the site manager said he can’t babysit the painters. I was so disheartened, still am every time I look at a wall. With the market the way it was, and my situation, I caved. There are other cosmetic issues too. Your video gave me some things on the outside to look for. How has your experience been since?
I just did a 1 year update video on my channel. Check it out. Best of luck to you!
Where in AL is this?
Definitely not a fan of the three rooflines that all concentrate and dump their rain right in front of the front door.
The crew that build the first few houses are the most qualified crew afforded to the project. They would come to build the model and a couple of each elevation/trim from the catalog. Then, the cheaper crew would come and get the rest done like cloning boxes. There are no need to measure anything anymore since everything, on paper, is supposed to be pre measured and counted. That's why if a mistake occurs, the solution is to add cosmetic wedges and shims to pass inspection...if any, since your building material is already allocated.
So, buying inventory house is only good if you are one of the first 10 buyers of the community. Otherwise, you are gambling on the quality since everything has been covered up when they stick the FOR SALE sign.
Honestly man, the problem isn't what you can see but what's hidden behind walls or from view. Getting a private inspector to oversee the different development stages of the home being built is crucial because these homemaking companies don't care about anything but building fast and selling quick. Remember that homes are built by a general contractor, not a house building company. Just spending the extra money to oversee a house being built right can save you a lot more money down the road when more serious problems start occurring.
Isn’t DR Horton one of the builders that won’t allow inspectors to go on the roof or in the attic? I also think they require you to have one of their reps accompany the inspector.
It's always good to have a third party. Frame and inspector come out to confirm. You should've never closed on this house and ran what were you thinking? This was 11 months ago. What else have you discovered? Are they returning your calls?
I am about to do a 1 year update video. So far I guess I got lucky. No major issues and all issues I had prior to closing and after closing was resolved in 48 hours.
It didn’t look like much insulation in attic, or soffit vents?!
I’m a Director of Quality/Warranty and I implemented a quality inspection one week prior to NHO so that way it gives builders two weeks to fix issues.
This house is horrible and wouldn’t pass our inspection and would not close.
Who was your inspector?
"DR Horton will come back and fix" lol
With all of those "minor" issues I would be concerned with the overall quality. A builder/craftsman that would overlook some of those issues would also "overlook" or just simply ignore other issues. And it seems obvious they rushed through this build. And they wouldn't allow you to bring a specialist in to give you an opinion? BS!! Corporate policy? Yeah right. That would also be a clue that they do crappy work.
What did the building inspector say about the roof, if it was me they would replace the roof decking and all
What slop! Was this built by a HS shop class?
Minor stuff that should have been blue taped by the super beforehand. Don’t be so quick to judge
@@flyingburritobro68 so quick? Who knows what missing in concealment. Prob no rebar on that cracked patio. Having to tear closer out and rebuild door ways. “Just minor stuff” 😂
One issue is that the mulch in the front of the house is too high. There should be 6' of exposed concrete below the brick so you can identify any termite tunnels built. The side and back were fine in that regard, but something to monitor.
I'm looking at a DR Horton home, and noticed the siding has dents/dibs where they meet do you know if that's something that's done? Similar to that flashing where it's puzzled together but no caulking in between. Thanks for the video, that lot is for sure great!
Do you not walk, run from Horton. Look at your contract that states you cannot sue them. You have to go and arbitrate. That’s a huge red flag. Do you more research do not buy anything from them. They will promise the world until you close and then you’re screwed because they will not honor any part of their warranty and you will not be able to sue them.
Imagine buying any other product, esp at the price point of a house, and having to hire your own person to QA it because you can't trust the company to build it right themselves.
This reply just won the internet. Great message.
Also can't trust the government to do it either.
I cant comprehend gutters being considered an 'option', you may as well have the slab and windows as an option because both will perish inside 5 years without gutters. The fact that the down-pipes aren't plumbed to a stormwater system is insane for a similar reason, it's going to turn the soil under the slab to muddy slush, inviting black mold, timber rot and slab subsidence.
Also the gaps around windows, wall joints and eave trim joints are NOT 'just cosmetic', anything that allows ingress of water inside the walls or attic; is structural. Even if the roofing supervisor wasn't lying about the boards, (which I highly doubt), the free hanging nails will create increasingly larger holes as normal movement occurs, allowing rain to penetrate into the attic.
Run; away.
Love these videos. I do however feel like any crack in concrete they should fix if it's before you move in. And the doors should be made where they don't hit other doors. I don't feel like that's too much to ask when you are shelling out all this cash for a new home 😮
my brother installed concrete driveway for parents and the neighbor, looks new after 20 years. no cracks.
Will they refund down payment when this happened
Good question! I would hope so!