steve359 wrote:
Still $$.
Minor compared to the cost of rewiring a house.
And may need a new fuse panel to accommodate a new standard of wiring.
If it's the old fuses instead of the breakers yes, also it usually coincides with uping the amerage to 200 watt service.
A typical 3 bedroom house should be about $5000-$10,000 or so to rewire depending.
Patch a few holes in the drywall and match the paint?, minor, a few hundred dollars.
Explains some leave "what passed inspection" as-is.
There are certainly situations where one goes to do one thing and the building dept will require more to bring certain things up to code. However it's for the safety of the house and those in it, lowers the insurance bill too.
In some areas, if it's a historic house, then the Historical Society gets involved and makes one do a lot more drastic changes to revert or maintain "historical aspects and details" which combined with building codes upgrades can turn a small roof leak on a 24" on center rafter roof into a major construction project to turn it into a 16" on center rafter roof, with new sheeting and "historical style" roofing that only one company makes and charges a fortune for it.
I've seen new homeowners of historical houses either go bankrupt over it or just keep replacing a tarp over the leak area, incurring daily fines and paying the city when they sell the house at a discount.
Soon as the building department finds out about the leaky roof, like from a too goody contractor the customer was calling to get estimates, then the city knows and calls the customers homeowners insurance, which if the house is under bank loan, the bank will be upset if the insurance is pulled as that is required to maintain the loan.
It's a real nasty mess one can get into with buildings and of course there are always sharks ready to bounce and they have their fingers all in the city too.