hunter is good, but your selling/commissioning dealer is even more important. Some will travel up to an hour or so, others you have to bring the boat to them. If I bought a new boat again ( a Bene in 1999) I would definitely make an independent survey by a surveyor of my own part of the purchase. That way everyone knows what the issues are and how best to remedy them.
Every boat, new or used will have problems, some related to the experience and expectations of the new owner.
I accepted my boat in 1999 with electronics to be installed...it was 6 months before the chartplotter was installed and a month more before it actually worked. I did the interface to the autopilot and did the calibration...the dealer tech knew nothing about the pilot or that it even needed calibration.
Your problems will range from cosmetic to the structural, and this is where the survey will pay for itself.
Check the dealer, and do your homework on what you expect "delivered" to mean. After the sale, things change a lot. Labor rates will vary between $55 and $100 or more. Mast head time about double that...so check things like VHF, lights, wind heads, etc and for more than a few minutes.
IF the dealer tells you take the boat, and asks you to do a "punchlist" do, so but make sure that the punchlist is an addendum to the sales contract and put in time frames for completion.
All the best, and hope it works out for you. There is a top hunter dealer in Deltaville, VA that consistently does good work. Sales guy is top notch too.
dave