New Real Estate Regulations in Massachusetts Shrink Homebuyers' Negotiating Power
A new state law will make it harder to waive inspections.

Both buyers and sellers in one of the country's most competitive real estate markets could soon have less negotiating power.
In 2024, Gov. Maura Healey signed the Massachusetts Affordable Homes Act. The sprawling legislation included a measure requiring realtors to let potential buyers have a home inspection before purchasing a house.
Buyers can still choose to waive an inspection as "long as the decision is not influenced by the seller or their agent," according to a press release put out by Healey's office. It adds that the law, which goes into effect on October 15, will also require "a separate written disclosure informing buyers that acceptance of their offer is not contingent upon the waiver of a home inspection and that the buyer may choose to have the home inspected."
The Greater Boston Real Estate Board has pushed back against the bill, accusing it of having "vague and overreaching liability provisions." The board has also questioned whether the state has enough inspectors to meet expected future demand.
But the biggest problem with the new law is that it would block buyers and sellers from using a common property negotiation strategy: waiving or limiting home inspections to get a better deal. In the words of Adrian Moore—vice president of policy at Reason Foundation, the nonprofit that publishes this website—the bill's proponents "are saying it's bad for people to bargain and negotiate when they're buying and selling homes, which is insane."
"There's no reason why home inspections shouldn't be one of the bargaining chips. I don't know what problem they're actually trying to solve," Moore adds. "The only people that benefit from this are the home inspectors. Now one of their members gets hired for every single transaction."
Sure enough, members of the New England Chapter of the American Society for Home Inspectors lobbied the legislator responsible for this part of the Affordable Homes Act. The inspectors "approached me with concerns that home buyers felt pressure to sacrifice their home inspection, and we talked about the liability that someone could incur by not having the home inspection," state Sen. Michael Moore (D–Worcester) told Boston.com.
In fact, Moore—Adrian, not Michael—says the bill "takes away an option people used to have, forcing them all to choose what father knows best." He notes that virtually any business can credibly argue that its services make consumers safer. And while individuals sometimes make poor choices, the mistakes of a few shouldn't take away the rights of many.
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"the bill's proponents "are saying it's bad for people to bargain and negotiate when they're buying and selling homes, which is insane." "
Actually, they are saying "You are too stupid to buy a house without the help of government".
As always.
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts is often categorized politically as progressive and liberal. All of the state's U.S. representatives and senators are Democrats. Democrats also form the large majority of the state's legislature, though the state has a history of electing Republican governors.
The current governor is Maura Healey, a Democrat who won the 2022 gubernatorial election.
Actually, they are saying "You are too stupid to buy a house without the help of government".
This is the real motivation.
Mass made it far more expensive if not impossible to build a new building using natural gas. The building codes aligning with climate change fear mongers have increased the costs to build by up to 40% in Mass. The people are not concerned about spending 350 bucks on an inspection if they can afford to buy a house in this Fascist DNC run State.
Maybe look at the rules and reg that are actually causing hardships and over reach by the DNC controlled gov and report on them?
Let's also talk about state licensed marriage.
Lol at the framing.
It doesn't shrink negotiating power for all buyers to go from waiving inspections to all sales requiring inspections.
It increases transparency and prevents cost shifting.
That's not an inherently bad thing.
Edit:
Buyers can still choose to waive an inspection as "long as the decision is not influenced by the seller or their agent,"
lol. IOW buyers will continue to waive inspections to keep their bids competitive.
Not quite. They also can't say "I'll waive the inspection if you knock $10k off the selling price.
An arms length contract is exactly what the parties agree to. Period. I have no idea about Massachusetts but in the state of Illinois a standard contract involving realtors and mortgages requires certain disclosures and representations on the part of the seller mostly to protect the bank and the realtors from liability. In the case of a transaction without third party actors the parties simply reach an agreement. In every case the parties have an option and a duty to do their due diligence. A home inspection can always be written into a contract but ultimately the market decides if the seller will agree. When a state dictates the terms of sale they are intruding not just into contract rights but also property rights. Fuck these assholes.
No Kings right?
I wonder about Seattle.
Buyer beware, anyone buying a home should want an inspection by a professional. This is not a used lawnmower being purchased...
Except
Those who can't do, teach. Those who can't teach, home inspect.
What happened with the California law making it illegal to offer an owner under market value?
Maybe someone realized you can't have a market value without actually having a market.
This is probably a law being written by an inspectors collective and being pushed into law by their lobbyists. Got to use the government to ensure the cheese flows.
Massachusetts has more corrupt government money than anyplace other then D.C. Many don't need inspections - they aren't getting mortgages.
Should the price of inspections be kept down, and what inspectors must cover, and license fees be raised, and will they be insured, and ...?