Every quarter, our team walks the home with a notebook. We photograph what we find. We rate it. We write it down.
The reason is not compliance. It is not paperwork. It is that, ten years from now, the record will be the only honest answer to a buyer's question, or to the homeowner's own, when they have forgotten what was repaired and when.
Most homes are sold without one
The seller swears they replaced the AC handler in 2021. The buyer takes their word. The inspection finds three items neither side remembered. The deal frays.
A Parker home has documentation: date-stamped, photographed, inspector-signed. It is the kind of thing that, on its own, does not feel like much. Until the day it does.
Records made for the next owner
We do not keep the Parker Home Record for ourselves. We keep it for whoever inherits the house, whether that is a buyer, a family member, or a future version of the homeowner who has forgotten the details. A maintained record raises the value of the home. It also raises the trust it carries.
Port St. Lucie, Florida
