Hometap Tip: Schedule Your Furnace Inspection

Header Image

An inspected furnace is an efficient furnace, leading to a toasty home and reduced heating bills. Additionally, an inspected furnace preserves your household health, since clean filters minimize air particle buildup and well-sealed vents reduce the risk of carbon monoxide poisoning. Spending around $100 (the national average, plus the cost of new filters) to get your furnace inspected and tuned up can provide incalculable savings to both your home and well-being.

What to Do

Ensure your furnace is in good working order prior to heavy use this winter.

What You’ll Need

The Basics

  •  Dust mask
  •  Gloves

The Works

  •  New air filter
  •  Foil tape
  •  Vacuum

How to Do It

In most cases, you should hire a professional to do a full furnace inspection and make any needed repairs. Beforehand, however, there are a few steps homeowners can take for a preliminary check.

All Furnaces

Go down to your furnace and look at the burner flame. Ideally, the flame should be steady and blue. If the furnace is running, listen for any unusual noises or vibrations.

Turn off both the fuel supply (gas line or oil burner) and power source to your furnace.

Locate the air filter and determine if it should be replaced. Purchase the appropriate size replacement filter from your local hardware store. Carefully remove the old filter and replace it with the new one. Discard the dirty filter.

Check the furnace’s flue pipe for any cracks or breaches. Minor breaches can be closed with foil tape whereas large cracks will require a full pipe replacement.

Gas Furnaces

Smell the area around the furnace for any gas odors. Check the batteries in your home’s carbon monoxide detectors and replace as needed. If anything seems off, call a furnace technician immediately.

Oil Furnaces

Check to see when you last had your oil filter changed on your furnace. If it’s been awhile or you can’t remember, schedule a filter replacement as part of an inspection.

Restore the fuel and power to your furnace.

If your heat is circulated through floor vents, remove their screens and vacuum out any collected dirt and debris. Wipe down screens and replace securely. Discard all collected dirt and dust.

LEGAL DISCLAIMER

The opinions expressed in this post are for informational purposes only. To determine the best financing for your personal circumstances and goals, consult with a licensed advisor.

Prep Your Home for Holiday Guests

Header Image

The holidays are coming! If you’re hosting friends and family this year, you know the preparations go way beyond the menu. There are guest rooms to clean and tidy up, decorations to unpack and arrange just so, extra groceries to buy and cook, and gifts to get (and wrap). While there’s a lot to do, it can all come together smoothly with minimal stress—we promise!

Grab a cup of coffee and peruse how these home and entertaining experts get their abodes ready for holiday guests.

Get Your Guest Rooms Ready for the Holidays

Add a little Southern hospitality to your guest room with tips from Southern Living, including putting out travel-sized toiletries (arranged in a pretty basket, of course), extra blankets, and a notebook with the house’s Wi-Fi password.

To help guests settle in, keep toiletries in plain sight, give your guests a set of spare keys, and offer a few types of pillows, says Alexis Hobbs at Woman’s Day.

Make your guests feel at home by giving them the best bed money can buy, says the team at The Spruce. This means top-of-the-line mattresses and pillows with premium linens to ensure visitors get a good night’s sleep.

Tackle Your House Projects before Guests Arrive

If you’ve been neglecting a few small repairs around the house, now’s the time to take care of them, says the team at Housetopia. Filling in dents and cracks, adding a fresh coat of paint, and creating inviting gathering spaces will make your home look pristine and your guests feel welcome.

Standout tips in Houselogic’s “6 Simple Steps to Prep Your Home for Holiday Guests” include banishing all clutter, adding night lights (especially in hallways and bathrooms), and creating a coffee station for your guests.

Don’t have a guest room? Real Simple to the rescue! Their “20 Ways to Make Guests Comfortable When You Don’t Have a Guest Room” story is a must-read for thoughtful hosts who just happen to have small spaces.

Watch the Pros at Work

If you need to have an existing room double as a guest room, check out how Meg Allan Cole with HGTV Handmade transformed her apartment’s always-office into a sometime-guest room.

Seal those drafts and get cozy sheets! Maxwell Ryan of Apartment Therapy partners with Better Homes & Gardens on a video with quick and practical tips for “How to Prep Your Guest Room for the Holidays.”

Opting for a day bed, getting cabinets with both shelves and drawers, and putting storage cubes to good use are just a few good tips from Lowe’s “5 Ideas for Decorating a Guest Room” video.

We’ve already started reconfiguring our guest rooms and picked up a few new throw pillows and linens. Which holiday hosting tips will you put to use in your own home this year?

Take our 5-minute quiz to see if a home equity investment is a good fit for you.

LEGAL DISCLAIMER

The opinions expressed in this post are for informational purposes only. To determine the best financing for your personal circumstances and goals, consult with a licensed advisor.