Lead Based Paint Disclosure for Sales Transaction - Delaware 2026

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the Lead Based Paint Disclosure in our editor.
  2. Begin by entering the property details, including the street address, city, state (Delaware), and zip code at the top of the form.
  3. Review the Lead Warning Statement carefully. This section informs you about potential lead exposure risks associated with properties built before 1978.
  4. In the Seller's Disclosure section, check either (i) or (ii) to indicate whether known lead-based paint hazards are present. Provide explanations if applicable.
  5. Next, indicate if any records or reports regarding lead-based paint hazards are available by checking (i) or (ii). List any documents provided in the space provided.
  6. The Purchaser's Acknowledgment requires initials confirming receipt of all information and pamphlets related to lead hazards. Ensure these are completed accurately.
  7. Finally, have all parties involved sign and date the certification of accuracy at the bottom of the form to validate its contents.

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The Buyer Property Protection Act, codified as Chapter 25, Title 6 of the Delaware Code, requires the seller of residential real estate to complete a formknown as the Sellers Disclosure of Real Property Condition Reportsetting forth any known conditions and docHub defects with the property.
Yes, you will need to disclose the lead paint. In an addendum to the Sellers Disclosure, provide all documentation and receipts that you have of remediation, including paint and primer receipts.
Before a contract for housing sale or lease is signed, federal law requires sellers, landlords, real estate agents, and managers of rental properties to disclose any known information concerning the presence of lead-based paint and lead-based paint hazards.
Sellers must disclose known information on lead-based paint and lead-based paint hazards before selling a house. Renovators disturbing paint surfaces have to give out the EPAs Renovate Right pamphlet.
SELLERS have to disclose known informa- tion on lead-based paint and lead-based paint hazards before selling a house. Sales contracts must include a disclosure form about lead-based paint. Buyers have up to 10 days to check for lead. RENOVATORS have to give you this pamphlet before starting work.

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People also ask

According to the California Department of Public Health, the answer is yes, the seller must tell you if he or she knows that there is a lead-based paint hazard in the home. There is a federal law, the Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Act of 1992, that requires disclosure.
The lead standards establish a permissible exposure limit (PEL) of 50 g/m3 of lead over an eight-hour time-weighted-average for all employees covered. The standards also set an action level of 30 g/m3, at which an employer must begin specific compliance activities, including blood lead testing for exposed workers.

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