Who pays for a pre-purchase fire escape inspection in NJ?
The buyer typically pays, since the inspection is part of buyer due diligence. In some negotiations the seller agrees to provide a recent inspection or to credit the cost.
Complete 2026 Guide · Updated 2026-05-11
Buyers acquiring older multi-family and commercial buildings in New Jersey increasingly include a fire escape inspection in due diligence. The inspection answers three questions buyers, lenders, and insurance carriers all want answered: Does the property have a current fire escape certification? What deficiencies exist? What repair exposure transfers with the property? Doing the inspection inside the due-diligence window — rather than discovering issues post-closing — is the practice that protects the buyer's negotiating position and keeps the transaction on track. This guide is written for buyers, buyers' attorneys, and buyer-side commercial brokers handling NJ multi-family and commercial acquisitions.
§·· / Schedule
Calls answered live during business hours. Written quote within one business day. We inspect, we don't sell repair work.
Mon to Fri 7 AM to 6 PM Eastern. Saturday by appointment.
Most NJ commercial and multi-family transactions include a 14- to 30-day due-diligence period. Schedule the fire escape inspection in the first week of the window, with the report delivered in time for the buyer to use it before the contingency expires. ${SITE.name} accommodates due-diligence-window scheduling and rush-turnaround report delivery when the timeline requires it.
Inspection access requires either the seller or the property manager to provide entry. The buyer's attorney typically negotiates access in the contract; ${SITE.name} coordinates scheduling directly with whoever the buyer designates. For tenant-occupied buildings, NJ tenant-notice law typically requires advance notice — plan for this when scheduling.
Current condition of the fire escape, deficiency log with severity classifications, photographic documentation, load test results (if a load test was performed), and the inspector's signed certification. The report is the factual record the buyer takes into negotiation, presents to the lender at financing, and provides to the insurance carrier at closing.
If the inspection identifies deficiencies, the buyer has several negotiation moves: request a repair credit at closing equal to the cost of remediation; require seller-side repairs (with re-inspection) before closing; or — within the due-diligence window — exit the contract if the deficiency exposure is unacceptable. The independence of ${SITE.name}'s inspection makes the deficiency log a credible basis for any of these positions.
Some commercial and multi-family lenders require evidence of current fire escape certification before funding, particularly on properties over 3 units. Most insurance carriers writing the new policy at closing require the certification before binding coverage. The same pre-purchase inspection report serves both — delivering it during due diligence prevents a last-minute closing problem.
Even when the inspection does not identify deal-breaking deficiencies, the deficiency log becomes the basis for the new owner's first-year capital planning. Items that are documented but not deal-breaking can be scheduled for repair in the right cycle, with the cost forecast known at closing rather than discovered later. The independence of the inspection makes the log a reliable input.
§·· / Intake
Send the property details and we return a written quote within one business day.
The buyer typically pays, since the inspection is part of buyer due diligence. In some negotiations the seller agrees to provide a recent inspection or to credit the cost.
Yes. ${SITE.name} schedules pre-purchase inspections within days when the timeline requires it, and reports are delivered within the standard 5- to 10-business-day turnaround — comfortably inside most 14-day windows. Rush turnaround is available when needed.
A current third-party inspection from a qualified independent inspector is generally acceptable. Buyers may still order their own inspection during due diligence to verify and to have a report prepared for the buyer's lender and insurance carrier.
Some commercial and multi-family lenders require evidence of current fire escape certification, particularly on properties over 3 units. The same report serves the lender, the insurance carrier, and the buyer.
Within the due-diligence window, yes — if the deficiency exposure is unacceptable. The report is the factual basis for the decision and the documentation supporting any contract exit.
${SITE.name} provides a written quote based on the property's specifics. Pricing reflects the actual scope of work — building size, fire escape configuration, whether load testing is included.
§·· / Schedule
Calls answered live during business hours. Written quote within one business day. We inspect, we don't sell repair work.
Mon to Fri 7 AM to 6 PM Eastern. Saturday by appointment.
Pick your municipality for pre-purchase fire escape inspection in nj-specific information: