Hidden Risks Most Cupertino Buyers Overlook on Appraisal and Inspection

Timothy Alston | Broker
Aegis Luxury Real Estate · DRE# 01328224
Published
April 14, 2022
Where innovation meets community
When you are buying a home in Cupertino, the appraisal and inspection steps are two of the most important protections you have as a buyer. Skipping either one, even in a competitive market, can expose you to serious financial risk. Understanding what each process does, and what it costs you to waive them, is one of the smartest moves you can make before submitting any offer.
You know how it goes in a competitive market. You find a home you love, the offers start piling up, and suddenly someone suggests waiving the inspection or the appraisal just to make your offer look cleaner. Maybe you are worried about losing out. Maybe the pressure is real. A lot of buyers in Cupertino are facing exactly that moment right now.
But here is the part most buyers have not stopped to think about yet: what are you actually agreeing to when you waive those protections?
What Does the Appraisal and Inspection Actually Do for You?
Let’s start with the appraisal and inspection as separate tools, because they protect you in very different ways.
The appraisal is ordered by your lender. Its job is to confirm that the home is actually worth what you agreed to pay. If the appraised value comes in lower than your offer price, you now have information you did not have before. You can renegotiate. You can ask the seller to lower the price. Or you can walk away without losing your earnest money, depending on your contract terms.
Have you ever stopped to think about what happens if you waive the appraisal and the home turns out to be worth $80,000 less than you paid? You own that gap the moment you close escrow.
The home inspection is different. This is your chance to have a licensed professional walk through the property and tell you exactly what is going on inside the walls, under the roof, and beneath the foundation. Issues with the electrical panel, plumbing, HVAC, or structural integrity do not show up in listing photos. They show up in inspector reports.
Can you see how skipping that step leaves you flying blind into one of the largest purchases of your life?
How the Appraisal and Inspection Empower Your Negotiating Position
Here is something most buyers do not realize until they are already in escrow. The appraisal and inspection are not just safety nets. They are negotiating tools.
When an inspector finds a problem, you do not have to walk away. You can ask the seller to fix it before closing. You can request a credit at closing so you can handle the repairs yourself. Or you can use the findings to renegotiate the purchase price. In a market where home values in Cupertino regularly climb well past the $2 million mark, even a modest repair credit can represent real money.
What would it mean for you to walk into closing knowing exactly what you were buying, with documentation to back up every dollar you spent?
And the inspection can empower your confidence in ways that go beyond dollars. When you have read the report, you know the property. You know what needs attention now and what can wait. That kind of clarity is worth something, even if the report comes back clean.
During this period, the Cupertino market saw rapid appreciation driven by tech sector growth and a wave of buyers relocating from across the country. Inventory stayed tight and multiple-offer situations became the norm. Buyers who skipped due diligence steps to win offers sometimes discovered deferred maintenance issues after closing, turning a competitive win into an expensive surprise. The lessons from that era still apply today.
When pandemic-era demand pushed buyer competition to record levels, waiving contingencies became common advice in ultra-hot markets. Some buyers won homes this way. Others won homes with hidden problems they had no legal recourse to address because they had signed away their inspection rights. The cost of a single undisclosed plumbing or electrical issue can easily reach five figures, a number that lands very differently on a homeowner than it does on a renter.
What Happens If You Skip These Steps and Something Goes Wrong?
What happens if nothing is caught before closing and you move in to discover a roof that needs full replacement? Or a foundation issue the seller may not have even known about?
Without an inspection report, you have no written record of what was disclosed or missed. Without an appraisal contingency, you have no leverage on the purchase price. You are simply the new owner, and the repair bill is yours.
That is not a scare tactic. That is just what the paperwork says once escrow closes.
For buyers exploring Cupertino homes for sale, the stakes on any individual transaction are high. Average home values in this market mean that a two or three percent pricing error, or a single undetected structural issue, can represent more money than most families put aside in several years of savings.
How long have you been working toward this purchase? What would it cost you, not just financially but personally, to get it wrong because you skipped a step you did not have to skip?
A Smarter Path Through a Competitive Offer
Based on what buyers are sharing in conversations across the Cupertino market right now, the fear of losing a home is real. But there is a difference between making a strong, competitive offer and making a reckless one. You can do both at the same time, with the right structure.
A skilled broker can help you frame your offer in a way that is attractive to sellers without requiring you to give up the protections that exist for your benefit. That might mean shortening the inspection timeline. It might mean getting pre-inspections done before offers are due. It might mean using an appraisal gap clause instead of waiving the appraisal entirely. These are options. Waiving your rights completely is not the only path to winning.
Does that make sense as a starting point?
If you are ready to look at how the appraisal and inspection can work in your favor during your home search, the next step is a straightforward conversation. Not a pitch. Just a clear-eyed look at your situation, your market, and what a smart offer actually looks like for your specific goals.
Broker Timothy Alston at Aegis Luxury Real Estate is available to walk through that with you. Call or text directly at (408) 207-4593. Would that be a helpful next step?
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Timothy Alston
Broker · DRE# 01328224
Aegis Luxury Real Estate
Harvard Business School Online, Certified Master Negotiation
23+ Years Silicon Valley Real Estate Experience
Retired Military Veteran

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Aegis Luxury Real Estate · Timothy Alston, Broker, DRE# 01328224 · 10080 N. Wolfe Rd Ste SW3-200, Cupertino CA 95014 · (408) 207-4593
Last updated: July 11, 2026 | Data reflects July 2026 MLS statistics

























