Tips for hiring a
reputable contractor
Is cheapest the best? When it comes to
home improvements, price shouldn't be your only consideration. When
choosing a contractor, credentials, workmanship, reliability and
references should be equally important.
When it's time for a home fix-up, there
are plenty of reputable contractors, repairmen and handymen from which
to choose. However, the fly-by-night, here-today-gone-tomorrow,
door-to-door types usually aren't trustworthy. Unfortunately, each year
many people find this out the hard way, according to a national survey
conducted jointly by the National Association of Consumer Agency
Administrators and the Consumer Federation of America. Based on a survey
of consumer agencies across the nation, complaints about home
improvements was listed as the top concern.
In fact, 59 percent of the consumer
agencies that responded to the survey listed home improvements as a
major complaint category. Some of the complains included door-to-door
paving scams, faulty workmanship, unfinished jobs and inflated bills. In
one of the more common scams, door-to-door salesmen offer low-cost
improvements such as driveway coating and roof repairs because they
claim to have leftover material from other jobs. In many cases, the
salesperson pressures the victim to pay in advance, and then never
returns to do the work. Other times, the work is shoddy and the material
is inferior. Still other times, the swindler claims to have used more
material than originally anticipated and the final cost greatly exceeds
the original price quote. There even have been reports of con artists
driving their victims to the bank and pressuring them to withdraw money
to pay for the job.
Another problem uncovered by the survey:
Respondents ranked home repair contractors as the most likely of all
companies to go out of business. This poses a major problem because
companies that go out of business often leave customers with no recourse
after they have made a
deposit for a good or service.
Getting the word out about scams will
help curb deceptive practices and steer money to legitimate businesses.
Here are a list of tips that will help you choose a reputable contractor
and avoid becoming a victim:
- Never pay for work in advance. If
they won't bill you for the service, don't do business with them.
- Never pay cash for a service. Write a
check instead, and wait until all work has been completed before
paying so you can inspect the work first to make sure that it has
been done to your satisfaction.
- Don't let servicemen or handymen into
your home if you didn't call to report a problem. Most legitimate
repair businesses don't make unsolicited house calls.
- Insist on seeing some form of official
identification, such as a sales permit or occupational license.
- If you're looking for a home repairman
for things such as driveway paving and roof repairs, check the phone
book, get references from friends and neighbors and consult local
trade organizations, the Better Business
Bureau or the Chamber of Commerce.
- Get a written estimate from several
firms. Make sure the bids are based on identical project
specifications.
- Once you've selected a company, get a
written contract for the work to be performed and make sure you
fully understand it. Get all guarantees, warranties and promises in
writing. Agree on start and completion dates and have them written
into the contract.
- Ask the contractor for customer
references who have had projects similar to yours.
- Never do business with construction
companies soliciting door-to-door or handymen offering to do work
cheaply because they have leftover material from another job.
- Remember that bargain repairs usually
aren't a bargain. A free inspection or low-cost cleaning job often
turns up the need for expensive repairs that will cost thousands of
dollars.
- Never do business in a hurry or allow
yourself to be pressured into accepting a one-day offer.
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